heinrich voelkel
Member
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2005
- Messages
- 36
- Format
- Medium Format
Dear friends at the forum,
I'm trying to figure out what to do. I'm not new to LF, shooting 4x5 for more than 10 years now.
I do own a Grafley Anniversary and Busch Pressman, which I like both, but...I was looking at a more capable camera to fit with myself, I want more rise, more wideangle capability and so on. I thought I need a rail based view camera. Today I had to shoot some architecture with a Sinar f2 and I hated the sucker. Too big, too clunky, to much pain in the a... to set up. Basically I disguised it, after so many years I used one day by day.
Okay, I looked at the Shen Hao and what I like about it, that you can move the back forward to fit for wide angle use. I have no idea how short ( lenswise) is usable on this camera, but I liked the feature.
Now I ask you. Should I look for a ARCA or is there anything out there, wooden field camera, sturdy, well build, cheap ;-) , I can use for landscape, architecture, cityscapes and portrait work.
I like to travel light, but not afraid of gear.
Huh, any suggestions?
Thanks in advance....
Heinrich
I'm trying to figure out what to do. I'm not new to LF, shooting 4x5 for more than 10 years now.
I do own a Grafley Anniversary and Busch Pressman, which I like both, but...I was looking at a more capable camera to fit with myself, I want more rise, more wideangle capability and so on. I thought I need a rail based view camera. Today I had to shoot some architecture with a Sinar f2 and I hated the sucker. Too big, too clunky, to much pain in the a... to set up. Basically I disguised it, after so many years I used one day by day.
Okay, I looked at the Shen Hao and what I like about it, that you can move the back forward to fit for wide angle use. I have no idea how short ( lenswise) is usable on this camera, but I liked the feature.
Now I ask you. Should I look for a ARCA or is there anything out there, wooden field camera, sturdy, well build, cheap ;-) , I can use for landscape, architecture, cityscapes and portrait work.
I like to travel light, but not afraid of gear.
Huh, any suggestions?
Thanks in advance....
Heinrich