Not sure if anyone else has mentioned this but if you want to shoot a larger negative without being married - as they say, to tripods, Mamiya 7 would seem to be a good option. Interchangeable lenses, portable etc etc plus great quality. Good luck with it.
Not sure if anyone else has mentioned this but if you want to shoot a larger negative without being married - as they say, to tripods, Mamiya 7 would seem to be a good option. Interchangeable lenses, portable etc etc plus great quality. Good luck with it.
I went throught this a few years back, when I came across both a pentax 645 and pentax 6x7 at prices I couldnt refuse when I had cash in my hand. I did extensive testing, and what I found was that at enlargements as big as can be made with my omega d2, the 465 actually gave better images- sharper, and I could not see any difference in tonality, and no difference in grain using acros 100. Being an old school bigger is always better guy, this was very counterintuitive to me. Sold the 6x7.
I have found that for me, to get any real advantage over any or the medium formats, I have to jump to 4x5.
Could the fact that you got better pictures with the 645 than the Pentax 6x7 be because of the large shutter in the 6x7?
I have never owned a Pentax 6x7, but i remember when i was going to buy my first Medium format camera in the early 90's a Pentax 6x7 user told me how he loved his Pentax 6x7 but wasen't sure if he would recommend it because the strugel with vibrations from the huge shutter.
And a high school shooter wanting to add 6x7 to his 645? Respect, man. There's hope for the planet after all!!!
Not sure if anyone else has mentioned this but if you want to shoot a larger negative without being married - as they say, to tripods, Mamiya 7 would seem to be a good option. Interchangeable lenses, portable etc etc plus great quality. Good luck with it.
Thank you for the suggestion! The Cambo certainly looks nice and half slides of 4x5 sound interesting. They are not too far off what I was expecting to pay for an RZ either, and with my 645 for faster and less methodical shooting I think it would compliment my 645 better than a 67 camera, which would almost compete with it.
6x9 is as large as you can go with 120 film in a 120 film camera. (Longer panoramas can be done with 120 backs on view cameras.) The lure of roll film convenience is strong.
There are 120 panorama cameras in 6x12cm, 6x17cm, 6x24cm as well as some in between. However, I only have a 6x12cm RFH for use on a 4x5in camera but not a 6x7cm or 6x9cm RFH because if I crop to those ratios then I'll shoot sheet film.
I own a Mamiya M645 Super and I loooove shooting with it! My high school has a darkroom and recently I've switched to printing 11x14 prints. I am satisfied with the quality but a lot of people say it is at 11x14 where 67 pulls ahead of 645. Is this difference worth getting a 67? Based on my current information if I got an RZ67 it would be married to my tripod, and currently I use my tripod with my Super about half the time, so I probably would not sell off my Super to get the 67. Being in high school, I am on a rather tight budget and I am able to save only roughly $100 a month, with it costing $600 to get an RZ67 Pro II and lens on ebay. Would those of you with experience printing both formats recommend getting an RZ if 11x14 is the largest I'm printing?
6x9 is as large as you can go with 120 film in a 120 film camera. (Longer panoramas can be done with 120 backs on view cameras.) The lure of roll film convenience is strong.
Try not to think about the print size, you're shooting 120mm - so you're all set in terms of available resolution. Shooting with an RZ is FUN and satisfying, you will not regret acquiring one. I started on 645 when I got into 120, and it was great for a while. When I got my hands on an RZ, the amount of work output DOUBLED instantly, I was just shooting way more, and I would say about 50/50 on the tripod. You DO NOT have to use a tripod with the RZ, despite what people say. I agree with what someone above said, maybe try an RB67 to save a few bucks. I saw a kit on Adorama for like $300 the other day.
At the end of the day, it is nice to have variety. Your 645 camera can be useful when you go out and you don't want to spend as much time composing, or you want a lighter haul. I just took my RZ out onto a frozen lake yesterday, no tripod, and I carried a second camera. Handheld RZ is a blast!
120 film isn't 120mm in any dimension, 120 is just a film type number because Kodak in the early years started giving films when they brought them out a type number starting at 100, hence 35mm film has the designation 135.you're shooting 120mm
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