R
ruben
Guest
Just in tone with the consumerist ever growing wave, eating some of my savings and much of my brains, I too feel that unstoppable impulse to open my window and cheer to the crowds with some new package from the mail.
Unfortunately, due to my exhausted resources, it will not be a really heavy package with some piece of German engineering, but a rather modest envelope with a set of LEE FILTERS, bought at us$ 20 something, before shipment. And yet I am aware of the potential danger I have paid an abusive price.
What the LEE FILTERS set is, and how we may benefit from, on behalf of our elusive yellow patches, may be of the highest importance for those newbies like me, still battling for a cause many will agree is totally lost.
Imagine for instance what a Canonet QL..., or an Olympus RC, or a Yashica from the Lynx lineage, or any of those glamorous gladiators of the past could be with a contrasty yellow patch jumping to our eyes, enabling us to accurately focus in fractions of second. A bit out of its context, I would like to bring here a sentence from one of our most eloquent street photographers (yes, I mean him), in a brief PM exchange: "For us, the viewfinder is everything"
So I have cleaned the camera viewfinder with some success, and it only made me even more anxious to achieve the goal than I was before. Then I applied the Rick Oleson very original idea, with many possible variations, but I realize that it really works FOR ME with the oversized patch in my Iskra. Then I go as far as actually buying a new 2x2 inch piece of new beamsplitter from Edmunds Scientific, only to end with the need of knowing how to cut it and a lot of small pieces, yet fewer than their still ongoing spamming, after due courteous request to stop.
Did I stop here ? Of course not, don't forget that it is not about the end result but the battle itself. So I decided to risk ruining a whole camera by wet cleaning all parts of the viewfinder, beamsplitter included. Surprisingly it didn't peel off, and another appreciated bit of improvement achieved, but far far from the goal. About the last disaster I prefer to keep quiet, our great G man already taking care for.
Denied permission to enter by the proper door I tryied by the window: Instead of brightening the yellow patch - Darkening the viewing window of the viewfinder. It did work to an interesting extent: The idea came quite naturally from my Kievs, with which you can easily focus in spite of the dark viewfinder. No doubt that having a clear viewing window with a highly contrasty and dark patch is better, but "a Contax is a Contax", not? Kappa went with them to real war.
The issue was the material to use. With simple kitchen tryial it became obvious that a Neutral Density filter of low intensity was nothing but perfection itself. Again, how to cut the glass...
Here comes the Lee set, with some dozen different very thin square leafs, very easy to cut with a simple cutter and a metal rule. Among the dozen, there are 3 labeled as ND. What a treasure. A single leaf may be more than enough for a dozen rangefinders. Each leaf is carefully packaged within a separate envelope.
Now, how good these filters are in preventing image degradation vis a vis a glass ND filter? I don't think they can match the almost perfection of glass. But I am almost certain about two things. They are MUCH better than an Ilford darkroom set of filters, none of which is ND but coloured, and thicker. The second is that with those 20 something bucks invested I will be at the other side of river.
Why I will be? Not because of the battling issue but because right now I am fiddling with the Electros, which as almost all of the dwellers here know, joycefully don't need any further yellow patch improvement.
Cheers,
Ruben
PS:
a) Darkening the viewing window may work best for cameras with relatively bright viewing, instead of cameras with relatively dark viewing window. (But on the other hand, without a decent yellow patch you have no rangefinder camera).
b) The ND cut is to be inserted within the camera, next and parallel to the outer glass.
c) Further follow up is to be expected.
d and very important) The Lee Filter set was not my own idea, nor I know what they were actually designed for, and for the matter it doesn't matter, but raised by several friends at another thread, special mention to BrianShaw:
http://www.rangefinderforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=34519
e) The writer has no university degree, nor even a driving license, and it will be fair to state quite a small knowledge in fixing cameras, much of it due to our master Kiev how to, Russ Pinchbeck, with his celebrated Kiev Survival Site.
Unfortunately, due to my exhausted resources, it will not be a really heavy package with some piece of German engineering, but a rather modest envelope with a set of LEE FILTERS, bought at us$ 20 something, before shipment. And yet I am aware of the potential danger I have paid an abusive price.
What the LEE FILTERS set is, and how we may benefit from, on behalf of our elusive yellow patches, may be of the highest importance for those newbies like me, still battling for a cause many will agree is totally lost.
Imagine for instance what a Canonet QL..., or an Olympus RC, or a Yashica from the Lynx lineage, or any of those glamorous gladiators of the past could be with a contrasty yellow patch jumping to our eyes, enabling us to accurately focus in fractions of second. A bit out of its context, I would like to bring here a sentence from one of our most eloquent street photographers (yes, I mean him), in a brief PM exchange: "For us, the viewfinder is everything"
So I have cleaned the camera viewfinder with some success, and it only made me even more anxious to achieve the goal than I was before. Then I applied the Rick Oleson very original idea, with many possible variations, but I realize that it really works FOR ME with the oversized patch in my Iskra. Then I go as far as actually buying a new 2x2 inch piece of new beamsplitter from Edmunds Scientific, only to end with the need of knowing how to cut it and a lot of small pieces, yet fewer than their still ongoing spamming, after due courteous request to stop.
Did I stop here ? Of course not, don't forget that it is not about the end result but the battle itself. So I decided to risk ruining a whole camera by wet cleaning all parts of the viewfinder, beamsplitter included. Surprisingly it didn't peel off, and another appreciated bit of improvement achieved, but far far from the goal. About the last disaster I prefer to keep quiet, our great G man already taking care for.
Denied permission to enter by the proper door I tryied by the window: Instead of brightening the yellow patch - Darkening the viewing window of the viewfinder. It did work to an interesting extent: The idea came quite naturally from my Kievs, with which you can easily focus in spite of the dark viewfinder. No doubt that having a clear viewing window with a highly contrasty and dark patch is better, but "a Contax is a Contax", not? Kappa went with them to real war.
The issue was the material to use. With simple kitchen tryial it became obvious that a Neutral Density filter of low intensity was nothing but perfection itself. Again, how to cut the glass...
Here comes the Lee set, with some dozen different very thin square leafs, very easy to cut with a simple cutter and a metal rule. Among the dozen, there are 3 labeled as ND. What a treasure. A single leaf may be more than enough for a dozen rangefinders. Each leaf is carefully packaged within a separate envelope.
Now, how good these filters are in preventing image degradation vis a vis a glass ND filter? I don't think they can match the almost perfection of glass. But I am almost certain about two things. They are MUCH better than an Ilford darkroom set of filters, none of which is ND but coloured, and thicker. The second is that with those 20 something bucks invested I will be at the other side of river.
Why I will be? Not because of the battling issue but because right now I am fiddling with the Electros, which as almost all of the dwellers here know, joycefully don't need any further yellow patch improvement.
Cheers,
Ruben
PS:
a) Darkening the viewing window may work best for cameras with relatively bright viewing, instead of cameras with relatively dark viewing window. (But on the other hand, without a decent yellow patch you have no rangefinder camera).
b) The ND cut is to be inserted within the camera, next and parallel to the outer glass.
c) Further follow up is to be expected.
d and very important) The Lee Filter set was not my own idea, nor I know what they were actually designed for, and for the matter it doesn't matter, but raised by several friends at another thread, special mention to BrianShaw:
http://www.rangefinderforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=34519
e) The writer has no university degree, nor even a driving license, and it will be fair to state quite a small knowledge in fixing cameras, much of it due to our master Kiev how to, Russ Pinchbeck, with his celebrated Kiev Survival Site.
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