'New to me' Kodak Medalist II

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JW PHOTO

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Any tips on holding the Medalist steady while firing the shutter? My first couple of rolls have had slight motion blur in most of my shots. I've been trying the Kodak recommendation of squeezing the shutter beneath my middle finger with the thumb on the bottom.
Kodak's suggestion is about as good as it gets as far as hand-holding the Medalist. On my old Medalist from years ago I put a handle flash bracket on and it helped control the camera much better. I find the leather to be far to slippery and the camera a little bulky/heavy for easy off-hand shooting. I have often thought about recovering one of my remaining Medalist with something a little more grippy. I often wonder how those Sailors and Marines handled their Medalist in the hot, sweaty Pacific during WWII?
 
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kenj8246

kenj8246

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Any tips on holding the Medalist steady while firing the shutter? My first couple of rolls have had slight motion blur in most of my shots. I've been trying the Kodak recommendation of squeezing the shutter beneath my middle finger with the thumb on the bottom.
Unless I have it on a tripod w/cable release, as I did for these cars, I try to keep the shutter above 1/25. Just hard to get a decent hold on this thing.
 
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kenj8246

kenj8246

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Kodak's suggestion is about as good as it gets as far as hand-holding the Medalist. On my old Medalist from years ago I put a handle flash bracket on and it helped control the camera much better. I find the leather to be far to slippery and the camera a little bulky/heavy for easy off-hand shooting. I have often thought about recovering one of my remaining Medalist with something a little more grippy. I often wonder how those Sailors and Marines handled their Medalist in the hot, sweaty Pacific during WWII?
Completely agree with you. It is definitely some slick leather. I, too, have screwed a flash bracket on mine. :smile:
 

JohnMeadows

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Any tips on holding the Medalist steady while firing the shutter? My first couple of rolls have had slight motion blur in most of my shots. I've been trying the Kodak recommendation of squeezing the shutter beneath my middle finger with the thumb on the bottom.

This is what I do and it works for me.
 

moto-uno

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A number of years ago I purchased a half dozen trimmed rolls from "Blue Moon " and they've been reused
numerous times . It's also much easier to re-roll these trimmed spools , as the smaller center on the metal
620 reels frequently necessitate relocating the taped film end onto the backing paper. I use the metal 620
roll on the take up end and the photo shop always returns the rolls. It's truly a camera for big hands when
it comes to using it off the tripod. Peter
 

Hatchetman

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I use a monopod and cable release. It is extremely hard to hold steady. The shutter button keeps going down and down and down and you think "damn, I must not have cocked it." THEN, surprise! Click!
 

JW PHOTO

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Kenny,
With good film and processing the 100mm 3.5 Ektar does shine. Those Skyraider shots of yours just go to prove it even more. I bought my first Medalist II over 40+ years ago and have not been without at least one since that time. I don't use them as much as I used to due to having Hasselblad, Rolleiflex and a Pentax 6x7 outfit, but I could get by just fine with only the Medalist if I had to. I truly think it was probably the best Kodak camera ever made.
 
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kenj8246

kenj8246

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Kenny,
With good film and processing the 100mm 3.5 Ektar does shine. Those Skyraider shots of yours just go to prove it even more. I bought my first Medalist II over 40+ years ago and have not been without at least one since that time. I don't use them as much as I used to due to having Hasselblad, Rolleiflex and a Pentax 6x7 outfit, but I could get by just fine with only the Medalist if I had to. I truly think it was probably the best Kodak camera ever made.

Would agree with you, JW. These are my only Kodaks so far but they are truly nice, especially those Ektar lenses.
 

gone

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These shots are fantastic. They look much, much better than the pics from Fuji 690 cameras in my opinion, and I used to own one of those beasts. The Medalist lens images much like a Heliar, only quite a bit sharper. That in itself is about as good as it gets. Probably not what you'd want for portraits of older folks, but wow, everything else would almost print itself on the enlarger w/ IQ like that.

The Tri-X shots are my favorites.
 
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kenj8246

kenj8246

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Thank you, I appreciate the comments. I've yet to own or shoot a medium format camera that produces results like these. And thanks for reminding me, I need to order some more Tri-X. :smile:
 

JohnMeadows

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Kenny,
With good film and processing the 100mm 3.5 Ektar does shine. Those Skyraider shots of yours just go to prove it even more. I bought my first Medalist II over 40+ years ago and have not been without at least one since that time. I don't use them as much as I used to due to having Hasselblad, Rolleiflex and a Pentax 6x7 outfit, but I could get by just fine with only the Medalist if I had to. I truly think it was probably the best Kodak camera ever made.

Hard to disagree with that!
 
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