I guess i would think that if somebody were going to make a new camera that a 35mm would be a lot more popular.?
Last time I checked, half-frame cameras were 35mm cameras -- at least all the ones I have.
I guess i would think that if somebody were going to make a new camera that a 35mm would be a lot more popular.?
Guess you haven't used half frame cameras. The Olympus Pen F series have superb lenses and there is no issue with grain using basic cheap films like C200
The Micro four-thirds frame is 17.3 mm x 13 mm - significantly smaller than half frame (24mm x 18mm).
Half frame is great fun. Making diptychs is part of the fun and often amusing-- olympus Pen EL
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Something along a 1/2 frame version of the Smena: focusing, coated f/4-f/16 glass triplet lens; B, 1/15-1/200 shutter; cable release; tripod socket; sunny-11 on the shutter/aperture scales. Maybe couple film winding and shutter cocking. And better materials - all high quality plastic would be fine, can't say I'm a fan of Soviet aluminum. Mint Smenas go for about $40 w/ shipping.Now if I were emperor of the film camera universe I would expand the capability of that new Kodak branded half frame. Keep the 2 element plastic lens but provide 3 stops, f8-f11-f16 and 3 position, close-middle-far focusing marked by symbol.
Optics do not cause grain.
I suppose it is inevitable that this new camera, if it ever comes to be, would be an all electronic control, need to charge battery, (I see a charging port.) type of camera. And I don’t see a provision for focusing the lenses but maybe it’s not apparent in the photo.
Now if I were emperor of the film camera universe I would expand the capability of that new Kodak branded half frame. Keep the 2 element plastic lens but provide 3 stops, f8-f11-f16 and 3 position, close-middle-far focusing marked by symbol. Next, a ‘B’ setting, besides the 1/100, standard cable release tap and tripod tap along with a hot shoe and skip the built in flash.
This would provide a bare minimum of features without pushing the price too high.
The camera could be very tiny and shirt pocket light.
You can't use the MFT camera manufacturers' lenses anyway, as there's no way to control them and many are designed to require massive software correction. But as I noted in the post right above yours, many of the manually-controlled lenses offered in MFT mount by independent manufacturers are also offered in mounts for APS-C cameras and were designed to cover that larger format. The half-frame cameras that I own typically have an actual exposure area more like 17x24, while APS-C other than Canon is typically something like 15.6 x 23.5 - very close. So I'd expect that many of these lenses that are offered in mounts for both MFT and APS-C cameras will do OK on half-frame.
An example of the kinds of lenses I'm talking about:
https://7artisans.store/collections/aps-c-m43-mount
I post a pic taken with a half frame camera that shows no grain. Blown up it will, as will any film image because film has grain.
I will stick with my Tessina Auto 35 as a single frame or half frame camera. Besides it is the only twin lens, twin reflex camera that I know about.
That Tessina lens certainly makes up for its slightly smaller image size -- even though the grain might be slightly larger. That's not a problem at all, of course, when you use a fine-grained film.
As I noted before, with Tri-X 400 the grain size can be a bit annoying. More annoying is having to always flip the negative over to get rid to the left-right reversal of the twin lens twin mirror design.
"But but someone may steal that pic I took of my cat!"
I edited Huss' previous two posts, in order to remove the problematic table formatting.
I will consent to accept pay for my beta testing services.
I post a pic taken with a half frame camera that shows no grain. Blown up it will, as will any film image because film has grain.
You complain about grain. But just complain about it because as always you never show any examples.
"But but someone may steal that pic I took of my cat!"
But of course I welcome it as a good thing.
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