rbsinto
Well-known
Yes it does. My only problem with the S3 is keeping my right hand middle finger from covering the small rangefinder window.
Other than that, I'm getting better at focussing quickly, and learning to use the auxilliary finder for my CV 21 (this focus then compose business is all new to me.)
Other than that, I'm getting better at focussing quickly, and learning to use the auxilliary finder for my CV 21 (this focus then compose business is all new to me.)
VinceC
Veteran
21mm lens is pretty easy to zone focus. Depth of field is extraordinary, even at f/4.
rbsinto
Well-known
I understand that. However, among the other things I'm finding strange with a rangefinder is my problem of always looking in the centre of the field to line up the super-imposed images. This of course means that the edges of my images are not getting the attention they'd normally get with my SLR's.
My F, F2 and FA all have grid screens which means that I can and do focus by looking at any portion of the field.
Again, it's something I'm having to get used to.
My F, F2 and FA all have grid screens which means that I can and do focus by looking at any portion of the field.
Again, it's something I'm having to get used to.
migtex
Don't eXchange Freedom!
rbsinto
with the CV 21 you don't need to focus.... it's AUTOfocus!!
with the CV 21 you don't need to focus.... it's AUTOfocus!!
VinceC
Veteran
rbsinto,
It does take practice. I spent years using Nikon manual SLRs with fast lenses and plain focus screens so that I could focus very quickly. An RF is not much different than a central auto-focus spot, but it did take me time to learn to focus quickly, then compose. With lenses wider than 50, I learned to rely more on depth-of-field. When following action with a 50 or longer lens, sometimes I have to accept the fact that the subject will be more centered than it should be.
It does take practice. I spent years using Nikon manual SLRs with fast lenses and plain focus screens so that I could focus very quickly. An RF is not much different than a central auto-focus spot, but it did take me time to learn to focus quickly, then compose. With lenses wider than 50, I learned to rely more on depth-of-field. When following action with a 50 or longer lens, sometimes I have to accept the fact that the subject will be more centered than it should be.
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dee
Well-known
Hmmmm ... What I like about this forum is that their are no heads stuck in the sand about rangefinder / film is the ONLY way to go ... that closet SLR users do frequent these pages !
Yes, and it appears nearly 2/3 of them are running either Canon or Nkon or both, and THAT's a little unnerving!dee said:Hmmmm ... What I like about this forum is that their are no heads stuck in the sand about rangefinder / film is the ONLY way to go ... that closet SLR users do frequent these pages !
(I actually did borrow a Nikkorex once with the 43-86mm zoom, so maybe I should have voted as having used a Nikon myself!)
W
wlewisiii
Guest
rbsinto said:I understand that. However, among the other things I'm finding strange with a rangefinder is my problem of always looking in the centre of the field to line up the super-imposed images.
I guess that has never been a big issue for me. I focus on the spot I want to be the primary point of my image and then can happily move the VF around as I need to.
However the biggest thing - and I think that this thread helps - is to avoid thinking that any one style of camera can do everything perfectly. Bzzt! If that were the case there would be only one kind...
My go bag has my ZI Ikoflex Ia TLR & my Bessa R w/ Canon glass. Within easy reach is a 2x3 press camera with a 6x7 back & seriously wild old lenses..There are no bad cameras (though I will cop to some being way worse than others ...
William
ajuk
Established
I got 4 OM bodies and an F80.
Aha, so did you vote "other" for your majority system or did you vote "Nikon"?ajuk said:I got 4 OM bodies and an F80.
ForeverUnknown
Let's Go Ducks!
I shot Canon for about 2 years (350D, 20D, 1D) but switched to Nikon the end of last year. Now shooting D200 and F3P.
Morca007
Matt
Digital- Fujifilm S1 Pro
Film- Nikon, FG, N80
Film- Nikon, FG, N80
The FG seemed to me a nice SLR, easy to use, and I bought a new one for my parents long ago, with a Tamron 35-80mm zoom. They liked it pretty well, took it to India and China and the Caribbean, but as time passed they came to prefer a simple point-n-shoot type.Morca007 said:Digital- Fujifilm S1 Pro
Film- Nikon, FG, N80
When we moved my mom out of the house a couple years ago the FG was still in the front closet. I took it to my local repair guy for CLA, but the internals had been rusted and corroded over the years... A humid environment with the house right at sea level on Puget Sound... It might also have gotten wet in their boat. Unrepairable, and the lens too.
sepiareverb
genius and moron
Haven't shot with an SLR since I got my 1st Leica, 2/06. This is the camera I was meant to have all along, just took me 27 years to find out.
petebown
Established
I've used Nikon SLR cameras in the past. I've bought a second-hand Canon SLR for my daughter to use. I currently use a Leica R7 but only use it with 50mm and telephoto lenses. I prefer to use the rangefinder for wide angle and general photography.
jmilkins
Digited User
Started in photography with my grandfathers's Contaflex then into a Pentax ME Super (love the compact size), then into nikons (FA, F801s) (didn't really need to, but worked in a camera store where you " had to be a nikon user or you didn't know anything about photography"
, then to Minoltas - currently own a few too many -9000, 8000i, 5xi, 9xi, 9 and nice lenses 20 - 400 primes. Digital SLR has really knocked their resale so I've sort of just kept them, really should set them free. Will always keep the 9 though.
Also have an OM1 and a Nikkormat Ftn with 50 primes- I got to the point where I realised the electronic wizardry is actually distancing me from what I enjoy - twisting a focus ring, and winding on manually, seting aperture and shutterspeed. It's that feeling that drew me into to rangefinders.
Also have an OM1 and a Nikkormat Ftn with 50 primes- I got to the point where I realised the electronic wizardry is actually distancing me from what I enjoy - twisting a focus ring, and winding on manually, seting aperture and shutterspeed. It's that feeling that drew me into to rangefinders.
Ducky
Well-known
N/F50 with manual lens. I have been shooting full manual but went for an AF on the bay. It's in the mail. I can get a nice FSU RF for the price of a nikon/nikkor AF Lens. My digital is a fujifilm s6000.
sienarot
Well-known
I started (semi-serious) photography with a Canon Digital Rebel and upgraded to a 20D within a year. From there I went through various different bodies (film and digital) and lenses, buying and selling, just to try different things out. I used to be very Canon gung-ho, but as my skill, style, and tastes progressed and changed, I eventually became detached from any equipment brand loyalty, though not on purpose. If anything, I really dislike Canon now because of their marketing practises and lack of customer service (atleast here in Canada). The only thing keeping me a Canon shooter is my 20D, two lenses, and a flash. I've successfully whittled down my Canon arsonal of multiple bodies and several lenses to just the bare minimum so it won't take much for me to switch brands if needed.
I really am a firm believer of using anything as long as it gets the picture in the end, even if it's something as simple as a coffee can with a hole in it and sheet film.
I really am a firm believer of using anything as long as it gets the picture in the end, even if it's something as simple as a coffee can with a hole in it and sheet film.
ifirdauzi
Newbie
I use Canon EOS-3
Pascal
Member
I started with Nikon (F3-HP). Then continued with the F4s. The next one was the EOS 1 and then the EOS 1n and up to EOS 3. After that, I had a taste for the Zeiss glass and it has been Contax ever since. Hard to go back to Canon or Nikon after Zeiss takes it's toll on you 
Currently have a Contax NX body with assorted N mount lenses and a T2 for a point & shoot.
Currently have a Contax NX body with assorted N mount lenses and a T2 for a point & shoot.
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