Considering options
Hi W
2,
I'm getting back into film myself after a few moons and have faced a similar question. I'm also a drummer and it happens as well on drummer forums when someone asks, "What do you think I should get?" A thousand preferences and opinions are spewed, few actually answering the original question. Let's consider yours:
- Budget: <$400.00 USD/£250--many choices at that price for the non-fussy novitiate
- Simplicity; manual operation OK. Sounds like you have some idea of how film speed, aperture and shutter speed relate
- MF, but no particular format
- A few specifics--
- good quality photos in a camera that won't let me down for not a lot of money (big ask?). Nope!
- mirror lockup for when I shoot landscape You thinking about a system camera, then?
- external cable-released shutter when I need it Very few that wouldn't have this.
Lots of studio-type box SLRs around, many names already mentioned. The West European stuff retains its value, so unless you get pretty lucky with a private sale somewhere, I tend to doubt you'll be able to find a good Rollei or Hasselblad at this price point. Even the Mamiyas and Bronicas will require at least one lens and film back and getting these in great condition--or as a kit--is still a bit spendy. That said, in 6 x 4.5 cm, you might do OK. I have used it and it is noticeably better than 35mm, though not what I'd call a quantum leap: consider a 35mm negative is 864mm
2; the 6 x 4.5 cm (or 60 x 45mm, if you will) is 2700mm
2, or only about 3x larger. Nice, but a 6x9 is about 6x larger than 35. You'll see--and
feel--
that! Also, many of these boxers like the RB 67 are serious
bricks to lug around.
Therefore IMHO, (backed by a little experience) a folding rangefinder would meet all your criteria to start with and can easily be sold or traded in for more sophisticated gear if you chose. Re-entering the film photography world ("analog" is just
too 21
st Century for this geezer!) on a budget myself forced me to consider the same criteria you laid down.
So I bought a Zeiss Ercona I folder with a Tessar lens on eBay; here's why:
- Truly superb optic: 4-element 105mm f3.5 Tessar from the East German Zeiss plant in a nice Tempor (Compur copy) shutter and cable ready
- All manual--I hate electronics in photography, flash and darkroom timers excepted
- Comfortably >$200.00 USD, no mirror lockup problems--no mirror! Built like a tank, dependable
- Lens equals any made today, monochrome or polychrome (black & white or color for you folks in Rio Linda heh, heh...) at f8-16
- Easy to carry, tripod mountable, 6x9 format with 6x6 mask option
I may still go with a Pentax 6x7 system should a little semi-pro work come my way (real estate) but this current choice fills my bill completely. Got a decent developing tank, tripod and enlarging lens total is about $400 USD. I've spent more for a cymbal!
If you have digital/35mm experience, a slowish, fixed focal length, 4-element lensed, manual rangefinder from the Soviet bloc-era may seem like only a shade above a disposable from the drugstore and a few years ago, I'd have agreed myself. But if you Google any of the Zeiss Ikonta/Voigtlander Bessa/Agfa Billy Record cameras (or their 6x6 bretheren if you prefer square format) and look at the images those fine old lenses produce, you'll feel the bug bite! Those big 6 x 9 negatives cannot be outdone, even by $40K worth of MF, digital glory. A class to themselves.
Consider and go forth. Good luck with your search and we will watch your future career with great interest... :munch: