T_om said:
I would hope that members here would keep in mind the goal of photography, rangefinder, large format, digital, et al is to produce an image and not have this forum degenerate into an engineering discussion solely devoted to shutter wrinkles and CLA'ing old cameras.
That may be the goal of photography, but it's not the goal of RFF.
To reiterate, one of the reasons this place works so well is that it does NOT try to be everything to everybody.
To me, the essence of rangefinder photography is not the cameras themselves but the style of images they produce.
Whatever that might be. If we were maintaining a traditional-process-photography forum, or a photography-with-nonstandard-cameras forum, or a documentary-photography forum, this viewpoint would be extremely apropos.
But we aren't. This is supposed to be a site about photography with rangefinder cameras, allowing us to concentrate on sharing solutions for the unique problems they raise and celebrating the unique opportunities they create.
That certainly does include discussions of CLAs and shutter wrinkles, when applied to specific models of RF cameras, because that clearly falls under the heading of 'solutions for unique problems.'
I'd say it would even include software discussions specific to digital cameras, such as the ongoing comparison we've got going on in the R-D 1 forum about various raw conversion options that might help us get the most out of that specific camera.
But when we get into Photoshop tutorials that could just as well apply to any type of digital image, and have nothing specific to do with rangefinder-camera photography, then I feel we've drifted off-topic and that we'll be diluting the benefits of RFF by doing so.
There are scads and scads of sites and forums devoted to nothing but using Photoshop, and there is a lot of great information on them. We can never do as good a job as those sites of presenting Photoshop info.
But those sites can never do as good a job as we can of presenting rangefinder-camera-photography info.
I feel we'll be more useful and beneficial to the photography community if we stick to what we're good at, and let others stick to what they're good at.