Sirius Glass
Subscriber
There has been a need and demand for a 6x6 digital back for a long time now. I wouldn't hold my breath. And the affordable part will take even longer, if ever.
That is why I am not holding my breath.
There has been a need and demand for a 6x6 digital back for a long time now. I wouldn't hold my breath. And the affordable part will take even longer, if ever.
High resolution digital backs are so good now, it is cheaper to use wider lenses and achieve MF quality with today's smaller sensors. A Hasselblad 907x/CFV100C or XD2 II 100C with a 25mm lens would give you an equivalent angle of view to the SWC's 38mm plus you can set the camera for a square crop of 33x33mm at 8750x8750 pixels. And you can skip the auxiliary viewfinder, too.That is why I am not holding my breath.
There has been a need and demand for a 6x6 digital back for a long time now. I wouldn't hold my breath. And the affordable part will take even longer, if ever.
I wonder if anyone has found a design for 3-D printing an adapter for using a cell phone to capturing images?
Has anyone seen or heard of such a project or preferred cellphone type?
Hassselnuts. Not 3D printed, but a digital back that used your iPhone, was out ~2014ish. You can sometimes find them on the auction site.
About on par with instax backs.
Well, when I do the numbers, a film scanner makes more sense than a crop sensor on a 'Blad. The SWC is still a Super Wide. The 50 is still a wide angle. I could live with a true 645 sensor that is 55mm wide but that is at least 5 years away (if ever) and then it will be very expensive. Downside is the time it takes to send the film out & get it back then scan it. Or pay a pro lab to do the scans and raise the cost and pay for every frame scan even the not so good images.
I use a FF Sony A7 III to use my 35mm lenses (Leica, Olympus, Contax, and SMC TAKUMAR Pentax glass) so I don't loose wide angle coverage. I can't do that with my Hasselblad & Mamiya 645 lenses.
I have a freezer full of 120 color film that I need to shoot or sell. So I am going to shoot some of it and see how scanning works out.
Any recommendations for a lab to do scans?
High resolution digital backs are so good now, it is cheaper to use wider lenses and achieve MF quality with today's smaller sensors. A Hasselblad 907x/CFV100C or XD2 II 100C with a 25mm lens would give you an equivalent angle of view to the SWC's 38mm plus you can set the camera for a square crop of 33x33mm at 8750x8750 pixels. And you can skip the auxiliary viewfinder, too.
And it's not digital, nor will it give you the same angle of view with a digital back. My post was to get the same result as the SWC, today.But I already have a 903 SWC.![]()
I tried that with my SWC and digital back when I still had it.Hasselblad shows an SWC with their current digital back. It just won't be as wide.
View attachment 406646
That's why I would recommend a modern back such as CFV 50c ii, if you can swing it. Still supported by Hassy.Be prepared: any older back will become a doorstop if something goes wrong with it. No parts, no technicians.
It's a terrific camera. You can have good deals now from people upgrading to the recently announced X2D2.BTW, what's the deal with Hasselblad X2D Mk 1 BTW? Seems relatively "cheap" at ~4000 USD for 100 megapixels. If it's only a matter of so-so autofocus, that might be tolerable.
It's a terrific camera. You can have good deals now from people upgrading to the recently announced X2D2.
My only use case where the autofocus struggles is when trying to take pictures of my moving kid. (I know, wrong tool for the job)
The size is right, it's very fun to use, and the results are excellent (as to be expected)
One thing I wish it had is a faster sensor readout in electronic shutter mode, to enable adapted lenses.
And it's not digital, nor will it give you the same angle of view with a digital back. My post was to get the same result as the SWC, today.
Your SWC is not obsolete, it is just not the same when used with a current digital back. But there are digital cameras with a similar angle of view.Buying a CFV 100C means that I would have to buy another lens to substitute for my 903 SWC. I do not feel that I should have to declare my SWC obsolete in order shoot digital. I will stay with film especially since I have a wet darkroom which does not have a desire to be obsoleted.
For me, the ability to preview a FINAL film composition is the only reason I want to expand the ability to have a digital back but in reality, its just secondary to the function of the old Polaroid back, to save slide and negative films, which is why the Instax back is a serious consideration.
I’m feeling more and more that a digital back is a waste of my limited resources, with real quality costing way more dollars than I’m able to commit to .
This thread has been a real eye opener, with analog coming out at the top of my current agenda, as things stand.
I don't own one, but I follow the discussions because I do own the 50 CFV. There's a strong belief that 14 bit is indistinguishable from 16 bit, and has a much a faster sensor readout. At least that's what I've read. Haven't yet tried it on my back.
Does the Instax cover the entire 6x6 frame?
Not sure how you can judge a composition--especially square--if you can't see the edges of the frame. Unless you intend to crop in anyway. At which point is the initial composition even critical?I’m not sure, but even if not, I only need a preview of one or two critical areas/details, to be able to be able to composes final image other a film back and a simple viewfinder templet will allow good instant images to be made.
If I. had a single sheet film/paper back and several holders for cut paper/film, i could make 6x6 images with a darkroom/portable darkroom and have the same results, just more time consuming.
Hasselblad rules!
Instax Square covers a little more than the Hasselblad film gate, you get a thin black boarder if the film is centered well.
Unlike the Polaroid backs, it's not that easy to judge exposure or focus with Instax, it's a very high contrast ISO800 film that lacks sharpness.
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