RZ67 for Panoramic 35mm

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Omid_K

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This may be a little out there but please humor me. I’ve seen 3D printed components that can take a roll of 35mm and allow it to be shot through a medium format camera. Has anyone experimented with using such a hack to create panoramic images on 35mm? I’ve looked a bunch online but haven’t found anyone talking about this. I’d love to try this out but I’d save some headache, heartache, and film if anyone knew exactly where to mask off the viewfinder. Would the ratio be anywhere near that of the XPan? Besides that I wonder if the backing plate would be an issue since there’s only the thickness of the film and not the paper. I guess I should mention that I’m not ready to part with the money it would take to dive into the XPan market (I know there cheaper alternatives). I’d just love to experiment with the wide format aspect ratio to see if I even have what it takes to meaningfully compose in such a way.


Thanks,
Omid
 

mshchem

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This may be a little out there but please humor me. I’ve seen 3D printed components that can take a roll of 35mm and allow it to be shot through a medium format camera. Has anyone experimented with using such a hack to create panoramic images on 35mm? I’ve looked a bunch online but haven’t found anyone talking about this. I’d love to try this out but I’d save some headache, heartache, and film if anyone knew exactly where to mask off the viewfinder. Would the ratio be anywhere near that of the XPan? Besides that I wonder if the backing plate would be an issue since there’s only the thickness of the film and not the paper. I guess I should mention that I’m not ready to part with the money it would take to dive into the XPan market (I know there cheaper alternatives). I’d just love to experiment with the wide format aspect ratio to see if I even have what it takes to meaningfully compose in such a way.


Thanks,
Omid
Don't spend your money on an XPan unless you have plenty to go around. I would find a old 220 back for a trial. The 220 backs sell for CHEAP. XPAN is a neat camera. Very expensive with no spare parts.
Try it with whatever back you have. Xpan is something like 24x60 mm.
 

k.hendrik

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You can 'hack' any format to a RZ67; 16x70mm, 26x56, 35x70, 46x70 (or even 9x12cm, well not so panoramic but doable) Make your own (takeup)spools in what ever your size you wish from old 120 spools.
Draw a thin line in the middle on your mask as a artificial horizon & after that its a bit of guessing
https://www.flickr.com/photos/77846450@N00/27185894158/in/dateposted-public/
https://www.photrio.com/forum/threa...4-exp-weird-problem.95043/page-2#post-2164815
https://www.flickr.com/photos/77846450@N00/18048569815/in/dateposted-public/
 

EdSawyer

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Mamiya made a 35mm adapter for the Mamiya 7. It might fit the RZ - hard to guess.
 

Grim Tuesday

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If you don't already have an RZ67 then your cheapest, best option is something like a Koni Omega 200 or a Mamiya Universal. The Universal would be totally cool with a 35mm adapter because the resulting frame would be 24 x 90 mm ! With the 50mm lens it would be even wider than the xpan. The cheaper option is the KO 200 with the 58mm lens, which would be somewhat less wide than the xpan. Alternatively if you don't want to go through the hassle, just use regular 120 film in an RZ67 or your horizontally advancing medium format camera of your choice with a wide angle lens and crop it in the dark room or in Photoshop...
 
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abruzzi

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When I looked at some of the adapters to fit a 35mm cassette into a medium format camera, they came with warnings that they only worked with cameras with a straight film path and not cameras with a curved path like Hasselblads. I’d guess the RB 67 would come under that heading. I’ve contemplated getting it for a Pentax 67 which has a straight path, but I’ve never broken down and tried it.
 

soulstar89

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This may be a little out there but please humor me. I’ve seen 3D printed components that can take a roll of 35mm and allow it to be shot through a medium format camera. Has anyone experimented with using such a hack to create panoramic images on 35mm? I’ve looked a bunch online but haven’t found anyone talking about this. I’d love to try this out but I’d save some headache, heartache, and film if anyone knew exactly where to mask off the viewfinder. Would the ratio be anywhere near that of the XPan? Besides that I wonder if the backing plate would be an issue since there’s only the thickness of the film and not the paper. I guess I should mention that I’m not ready to part with the money it would take to dive into the XPan market (I know there cheaper alternatives). I’d just love to experiment with the wide format aspect ratio to see if I even have what it takes to meaningfully compose in such a way.


Thanks,
Omid

i have a rz67 proii and have been also interested in trying to shoot pano in my camera. i found this video: they use a rb67 and use the 3d printed 35mm spools. i asked about its use in the comments.

regarding the mask you just get a cardboard and cut out the aspect ratio. You will get around 24x65/70.

i am actually trying to find someone who would be willing to make 6x12 coupled rangefinder.
 

k.hendrik

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after 10 days OMiD didn't come back to us so maybe his problem is solved or disappeared :smile:

DSC_0012.jpg
in nature (17).jpg
nature1.jpg
 
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MattKing

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What camera did you use for those shots, Hendrik? They look very cool!
The thread title and the home-made adapters illustrated at the beginning of the post suggest to me that it was an RZ67, although the adapters look similar to the ones I've tried out in my RB67.
 

soulstar89

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6x7 proii, I have also a 26x56 back but then the sprockets aren't visible
i rememeber speaking to you a while ago now regarding the 26x56 back. if you ever want to give it a new home i am more that happy to adopt :D

hope you are well
 

Jeremy Mudd

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First post here, have been reading the forum for a while but wanted to add to the conversation. I've shot many 35mm pano images on my RB67 ProSD with a set of adapters I bought from eBay and a 220 back. Typically I get around 17 shots per roll of 36exp 35mm film. I had to do a little modification to the back so that the counter works properly but other than that its basically plug and play. The only drawback, if you could call it that, is that once done you just have to put the back in your bag or pack and then later when at home in a dark room or changing bag you can remove the roll and then develop it. Since there's no provision for take-up once shot.
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Jeremy Mudd

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I should have also added that I made a drop-in mask for the viewfinder to show only the field of view of the 35mm neg area. I made it from 0.5mm black poly and its cut to fit just inside the border perimeters of the viewfinder. I store the mask and the 220 back with the adapters in their own separate bag together so I don't misplace the mask. Composing without it isn't much fun!
 

Dani

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i rememeber speaking to you a while ago now regarding the 26x56 back. if you ever want to give it a new home i am more that happy to adopt :D

hope you are well

So that back accepts 35mm or is it more like 120 that is being cropped in camera? There's one on ebay right now without the mask for the holder but I'd definitely would like to know more information about that back.
 

k.hendrik

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So that back accepts 35mm or is it more like 120 that is being cropped in camera? There's one on ebay right now without the mask for the holder but I'd definitely would like to know more information about that back.
Reading helps if you want to know more.
 

Dani

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I'll go back to 1st grade and come back in 7 years once I learn, thanks.
 
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