pgomena
Member
If you live in a larger city, rent a Hasselblad from a pro photography shop. Run a couple of rolls of transparency film through it and look at them on a light box with a good loupe. You'll like what you see.
I own a Hassy and a faithful old Rollei TLR. The Rollei mostly gathers dust these days, but if I'm off on safari, it's in the kit as backup. I love the Hasselblad's lens interchangeability and the fact that I can have two (or more) film backs at my disposal, each with a different film or marked for "normal" or "plus" or "minus". The Rollei is good, the Hassy more versatile. The lenses are equally good but different. The TLR has a tessar-type Schneider, the Hassy the Planar. The Rollei has always seemed sharp but contrasty, the Hasselblad sharp but smooth and less contrasty. Each has its place. I find the Hassy is handy to use and a well-thought-out system. I'm a happy guy.
Peter Gomena
I own a Hassy and a faithful old Rollei TLR. The Rollei mostly gathers dust these days, but if I'm off on safari, it's in the kit as backup. I love the Hasselblad's lens interchangeability and the fact that I can have two (or more) film backs at my disposal, each with a different film or marked for "normal" or "plus" or "minus". The Rollei is good, the Hassy more versatile. The lenses are equally good but different. The TLR has a tessar-type Schneider, the Hassy the Planar. The Rollei has always seemed sharp but contrasty, the Hasselblad sharp but smooth and less contrasty. Each has its place. I find the Hassy is handy to use and a well-thought-out system. I'm a happy guy.
Peter Gomena