crispy12
Well-known
In contrast, with my fixed lens RF, I take a light reading, set my speeds, set my focus, frame it up, push the button... and then pray. To me it is much more of a black box because I don't know if it worked or not, and I won't know for weeks. It isn't that the RF is less involving, it is that it is much more mysterious and unknown. Especially shooting B&W. With my film SLR, at least I get an idea of what the monochrome image will look like (even if it is mono-green or whatever). With the RF I don't even get that.
I was like that when I started out with film, but as I got more and more familiar with it I could predict and control the results. Some stuff like depth of field still requires an educated guess, but I've managed to control my exposures for the subject now when previously I just followed the meter.
The end result is immense satisfaction when developing and scanning my film, seeing that my negs mirror the shot I've envisioned! It's a great feeling.