dcsang
Canadian & Not A Dentist
Well, I got the M7 from Peter Kelly (Herbkell@shaw.c here on RFF) and it took me all of a couple hours tops to run through a roll of Silvertone 400 24's.
I dev'd it yesterday in Rodinal 1:50 and just used the 1:50 APX 400 as a guide - it seemed ok to me but I've heard others say that it's really more of a 200 ISO film - regardless; I dev'd it 😀
I must say that I'm pleased at the M7's ability to generally meter a scene (no brainer metering) and assign a shutter speed accordingly in "Auto" mode. I'm also pleased at how easy it is to handle difficult backlit scenes if the photog knows what he/she is doing.
Here's some of what I've got from roaming around/in St. James Cathedral in Toronto.
I metered the pillar in the forground here and held the M7 shutter button down to lock the reading. 1/30, f2.0, 50mm Rigid cron.
I let the camera do it's thing here.. had the M7 on the table top tripod on the floor so all I know is the aperture. It did quite well with the wide angle!! ??, f4.0, 21mm Voigtlander
Metered the back of this woman's head. This shot also shows the bokeh and ability of the Voigtlander 35mm Nokton. 1/24, f1.2, 35mm Voigtlander Nokton.
Again, metering/focusing on the grey pillar here. 1/60, f1.2, 35mm Nokton.
Focus and metering are on the metal eagle here. I'm not sure what that highlight is to the top left of the eagle but I think it's from either a reflection or such from the structure. 1/45, f1.2, 35mm Nokton.
I'm satisfied to note as well that the shutter speeds are "more" than just what is offered on the older mechanical Leicas. The 1/24, 1/45 and others that I noted during my shooting is something that I one couldn't attain via the mechanical shutters. That being said, I would still carry the M2 if I was going to be shooting in the rain 😀
Cheers and thanks for putting up with the length/size of this post.
Dave
I dev'd it yesterday in Rodinal 1:50 and just used the 1:50 APX 400 as a guide - it seemed ok to me but I've heard others say that it's really more of a 200 ISO film - regardless; I dev'd it 😀
I must say that I'm pleased at the M7's ability to generally meter a scene (no brainer metering) and assign a shutter speed accordingly in "Auto" mode. I'm also pleased at how easy it is to handle difficult backlit scenes if the photog knows what he/she is doing.
Here's some of what I've got from roaming around/in St. James Cathedral in Toronto.
I metered the pillar in the forground here and held the M7 shutter button down to lock the reading. 1/30, f2.0, 50mm Rigid cron.
I let the camera do it's thing here.. had the M7 on the table top tripod on the floor so all I know is the aperture. It did quite well with the wide angle!! ??, f4.0, 21mm Voigtlander
Metered the back of this woman's head. This shot also shows the bokeh and ability of the Voigtlander 35mm Nokton. 1/24, f1.2, 35mm Voigtlander Nokton.
Again, metering/focusing on the grey pillar here. 1/60, f1.2, 35mm Nokton.
Focus and metering are on the metal eagle here. I'm not sure what that highlight is to the top left of the eagle but I think it's from either a reflection or such from the structure. 1/45, f1.2, 35mm Nokton.
I'm satisfied to note as well that the shutter speeds are "more" than just what is offered on the older mechanical Leicas. The 1/24, 1/45 and others that I noted during my shooting is something that I one couldn't attain via the mechanical shutters. That being said, I would still carry the M2 if I was going to be shooting in the rain 😀
Cheers and thanks for putting up with the length/size of this post.
Dave
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