benlees
Well-known
Guess that’s why it’s so modestly priced.
Yeah. I should mention the 65mm cost me $75, and had the shutter not broken, it would have been a screaming deal. Very good lens. I didn't bother with any repair.
Guess that’s why it’s so modestly priced.
I was never comfortable using telephotos on the M2 but the 150mm works a treat on the Mamiya.
Beginning to wonder whether the Fujifilm GA645 may be a better compromise. Once you start piecing a camera together, becomes quite the expense. Finder with a meter, updating a focus screen, one or two film backs... then the glass
I am getting to like the 645 more using my Zeiss 531.....
David
Zeiss 531? Not familiar with that
....the 50mm is one of the best lenses ever made by anyone ever. It was seriously the nicest camera system I have ever owned or used and probably will remain so for the rest of my life.
Super Ikonta 531
There is a video by Steve O'Nions on YT discussing Bronica SQ vs Hasselblad. Bottom line is get Hasselblad if you can afford it, but it is 3x the price.
Recently got myself a SQ-A kit to try the square format. Bulkier than Mamiya M645 but same weight, and the prism is A-priority AE (not just coupled + metered). One of the 4 backs is bad but otherwise, so far so good.
On that note, the Mamiya M645 system is also pretty nice.
I have a Mamiya 6 that I don't use often enough. A. I can't get my brain around square photos. B. Instagram has basically ruined square photos for me anyway. C. I need to figure out how 6x6 can effectively produce cropped rectangular photos - which is what pros have always done. And D. Its lenses are absolutely fantastic.
The medium format world was always more limited than the 35mm world for choice. I guess this was because the target market was pros who were comfortable with the medium and the prices were always roughly 5x-10x of the cost of 35mm for the same fields of view. You have said above that a handheld meter is a deal breaker for you, but in general that's how pros worked in the golden age of MF gear. As a result, the metering in MF gear was never as good or as sophisticated as the metering you'd get from a good handheld meter, which gave you incident, reflected spot, flash, lighting ratios, sometimes color temperature and so on. I think that's because a lot of MF gear was used in a studio setting, and a handheld incident meter is really more of a precision instrument than any reflected meter that you are going to find in a camera. In camera light meters are also, in my experience, the first thing to break. So that's one axis.
The weight and bulk of a camera system is the other main axis of your wish-list.
In general, and again in my experience, the differences between MF systems, in terms of the image quality they produce are smaller than the differences between formats. As long as you are using a multi-coated lens (say, anything from around 1970 onwards) there is going to be less of a difference between a Kiev 60, a Pentacon 6, a Hassleblad, a Bronica, a Mamiya C330, a Mamiya 6, a Plaubel Makina, etc. etc. than there will be between the worst of them and the best Canon/Nikon/Leica. In general. If you like birding, or sports photography, or need 36 shots per roll, then the balance tips the other way (you rarely if ever saw a Hassie on the sidelines of an NFL or NBA game-wrong tool for the job). This is a long winded way of saying, that unless getting wrapped around the axle of whose bokeh is better is fun for you (and there is nothing wrong with that), I wouldn't go too far down the Bronica vs. Hassy rabbit hole. There were/are differences in the systems, but IQ is not one of them.
I would focus on how you like to work, and then back into your tool choice that way. If you are a one-camera/one-lens guy, then one answer may pop out. If you are a street photographer, then another may. And if you are a generalist, and want flexibility then you get a different answer. For instance, when I was traveling in Japan, I took a Leica for snapshots, and the Fuji 6x4.5 (the manual one, not the autofocus) for when I wanted the bump in IQ. It was super light, made of plastic (mostly) and gave me a bump in IQ for very little weight penalty.
In your shoes, the Mamiya 6 is a great choice. If I was making the decision for myself, I'd chose a no meter Hassie 500 CM - less stuff to break and if you are only carrying one body and one lens the bulk is not bad. Also, it was the industry standard for many years, there are spare parts and replacements for everything still out there all over the world. But that's me, and my choice would be suited to how I work. So think of your ideal work flow. That won't lead to a bad result no matter what you choose.
Beginning to wonder whether the Fujifilm GA645 may be a better compromise. Once you start piecing a camera together, becomes quite the expense. Finder with a meter, updating a focus screen, one or two film backs... then the glass
James, If you're jonesing for 6x6.... the 645 may not do it for you (i preferred the bigger negs) Another huge consideration for me....the 645 frames in portrait orientation and i don't see the world that way & I love not having to turn a 6x6 camera. As far as expense...you can piece it together over time....& it's up to your choices & your budget to decide just what is "enough."
The medium format world was always more limited than the 35mm world for choice. I guess this was because the target market was pros who were comfortable with the medium and the prices were always roughly 5x-10x of the cost of 35mm for the same fields of view. You have said above that a handheld meter is a deal breaker for you, but in general that's how pros worked in the golden age of MF gear. As a result, the metering in MF gear was never as good or as sophisticated as the metering you'd get from a good handheld meter, which gave you incident, reflected spot, flash, lighting ratios, sometimes color temperature and so on. I think that's because a lot of MF gear was used in a studio setting, and a handheld incident meter is really more of a precision instrument than any reflected meter that you are going to find in a camera. In camera light meters are also, in my experience, the first thing to break. So that's one axis.
The weight and bulk of a camera system is the other main axis of your wish-list.
In general, and again in my experience, the differences between MF systems, in terms of the image quality they produce are smaller than the differences between formats. As long as you are using a multi-coated lens (say, anything from around 1970 onwards) there is going to be less of a difference between a Kiev 60, a Pentacon 6, a Hassleblad, a Bronica, a Mamiya C330, a Mamiya 6, a Plaubel Makina, etc. etc. than there will be between the worst of them and the best Canon/Nikon/Leica. In general. If you like birding, or sports photography, or need 36 shots per roll, then the balance tips the other way (you rarely if ever saw a Hassie on the sidelines of an NFL or NBA game-wrong tool for the job). This is a long winded way of saying, that unless getting wrapped around the axis of whose bokeh is better is fun for you (and there is nothing wrong with that), I wouldn't go too far down the Bronica vs. Hassy rabbit hole. There were/are differences in the systems, but IQ is not one of them.
I would focus on how you like to work, and then back into your tool choice that way. If you are a one-camera/one-lens guy, then one answer may pop out. If you are a street photographer, then another may. And if you are a generalist, and want flexibility then you get a different answer. For instance, when I was traveling in Japan, I took a Leica for snapshots, and the Fuji 6x4.5 (the manual one, not the autofocus) for when I wanted the bump in IQ. It was super light, made of plastic (mostly) and gave me a bump in IQ for very little weight penalty.
In your shoes, the Mamiya 6 is a great choice. If I was making the decision for myself, I'd chose a no meter Hassie 500 CM - less stuff to break and if you are only carrying one body and one lens the bulk is not bad. Also, it was the industry standard for many years, there are spare parts and replacements for everything still out there all over the world. But that's me, and my choice would be suited to how I work. So think of your ideal work flow. That won't lead to a bad result no matter what you choose.