Richard G
Veteran
That’s cool too. Amazing collection you’ve amassed.
And thanks Joe. It’s been a lot of fun.
And thanks Joe. It’s been a lot of fun.
Thanks PF. Sorry to hear bout your experience with this camera. The member I bought from here had photographed the equipment so expertly that it gave me the confidence to go ahead with the purchase. But with the long trip from the US to Australia I did wonder how it would all arrive. He had carefully taped each lens cap on two sides to the filter rim of the lenses. The amount of packing and ballast etc would have made this a safe shipment to Tranquility Base on the Moon I reckon. I was lucky to get such a trouble-free camera.
Here's the Ektar I should have been shooting last night:
Hasselblad 500CM 150mm Sonnar f4 Kodak Ektar 100 by Richard, on Flickr
Thanks. I did get an old unmetered prism finder and use it regularly but it makes the whole rig a lot heavier. The slight abstraction of the waist level finder is a little less seductive than the prism view and shooting low with this or a TLR is part of the magic of what they produce. The prism finder is a necessity to stop calling for a ladder for some shots. Glad to hear such praise for the Sonnar: I’m certainly enjoying what it has to offer.
I carried four Hasselblads around on weekends for many many years. 95% was handheld, 5% tripod. You can get used to the reverse aspects, but sometimes prism is the best way to go, I have six or eight of them around the studio. I carried 8-10 120 & 220 mags, loading on the fly. Now that I am older, and doing only personal work, I will take out a 500C/M with 80mm lens, waist level finder, or stovepipe; that is my favorite blad finder; you should get one or at least try it.
Enjoy your equipment, remember they made over a hundred accessories for these things. I know 'cause I have 70% of them at my disposal. I have really tried to buy everything cheap-cheap. For instance I wouldn't pay more than five bucks for any Bay50 blad filter. I used to buy piles of them.
Irving Penn had a Rollei with a Hasselblad Stovepipe adapted to fit it.
I always thought that was super cool.
If I ever buy a Rollei (which I have resisted) I would mod it to that in a heartbeat.
Enjoy your Hasselblad Richard!
And my experience differs from what you hear on the internet regarding shutter speed. I haven't found the mirror slap to be a problem. The ka-whumpf is loud, but I'm not convinced it is causing shake problems. I'm the problem. I've been using a 645 with an 80mm lens and the focus length is the challenge to keeping things sharp and not the mirror. If you do things well, like brace the finder against your head and are careful with tripping the shutter, you'll be fine at speeds lower than 1/250th, irrespective of the mirror slap.
Just look at Penn´s book: worlds within a small room. Penn writes a chapter on the book about the camera! He acknowledges the camera as trully ijmportant for those images. I never saw that happen in any other masterfull photo book. I had to have a Rollei because of Penn and made sure to buy a 3.5 because that was the lens he used. Not the big 2.8.