pepeguitarra
Well-known
I recently bought an almost mint Canon P RF. It came with a non-working light meter, so I decided to shoot using Sunny16 and this is what I got:
Bill by Palenquero Photography, on Flickr
Salvation Army by Palenquero Photography, on Flickr
Christmas Songs by Palenquero Photography, on Flickr



nukecoke
⚛Yashica
Congrats on the Purchase!
I have a Canon L2 RF(with metal curtains surprisingly) and a Canon 7 RF, both had not been serviced in decades and both came with working shutter even with accurate shutter speeds. Just wow. They are absolutely fine cameras and built to last. I cleaned their finders and they became fine shooters. I dare say they are more reliable and durable than any LTM cameras from other brands.
I didn't buy a P because I wear glasses and can't see the 35mm frameline.
I have a Canon L2 RF(with metal curtains surprisingly) and a Canon 7 RF, both had not been serviced in decades and both came with working shutter even with accurate shutter speeds. Just wow. They are absolutely fine cameras and built to last. I cleaned their finders and they became fine shooters. I dare say they are more reliable and durable than any LTM cameras from other brands.
I didn't buy a P because I wear glasses and can't see the 35mm frameline.
Dez
Bodger Extraordinaire
I recently bought an almost mint Canon P RF. It came with a non-working light meter, so I decided to shoot using Sunny16 and this is what I got:
Nicely exposed pictures, but I'm a bit vague on how one uses sunny 16 indoors.
I find a smartphone light meter app very useful sometimes.
Cheers,
Dez
bluesun267
Well-known
Canon's are truly unsung heroes of RF-dom. I shoot with a VL (the metal shutter curtain version of the L1). I used a P and a 7 for a short time and felt the winding mechanism wasn't as good (maybe they had to compromise on it once they went to the single, non-rotating shutter speed dial.) But that's a minor nitpick. Very solid reliable cameras that need much less TLC than Leicas of the same era.
pepeguitarra
Well-known
Nicely exposed pictures, but I'm a bit vague on how one uses sunny 16 indoors.
I find a smartphone light meter app very useful sometimes.
Cheers,
Dez
Me neither, but a table I found says that at f/16 speed(time exposure)=1/ISO
In shadows, no f/16, but f/4. I assume f/1.8 and 1/60. It is more like a guess.
traveler_101
American abroad
Me neither, but a table I found says that at f/16 speed(time exposure)=1/ISO
In shadows, no f/16, but f/4. I assume f/1.8 and 1/60. It is more like a guess.
huh? How's that?
lynnb
Veteran
Congratulations on the P! It would be nice to know what lens and film was used.
Cheers,
Cheers,
Kenomatic
Newbie
Hello. I'm new here... Just wanted to reply to this thread and give the link to the rest of this person's Canon P photos in his Flickr album. It looks like he used a combination of Kodak Tri-X and Fuji Neopan film, with several different lenses:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/palenquero/albums/72157676469744160
https://www.flickr.com/photos/palenquero/albums/72157676469744160
one90guy
Well-known
Purchased a P in February, finally got to use it last week. Hope to get developed next week. Ran out of 2 chemicals
So far am really liking it, like the fit in hand and film advance. The small lens seems a little awkward to focus or change stops but with use it should be a non issue.
David
David
Share:
-
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.