3js
Established
And oh how much we do long for a 55 version, at least I would die for one! So please please please...
That's interesting news about the electronically controlled shutter being so quiet. I agree it is not going to be a common camera. I can't wait to read a review in pop photo where the reviewer laments the lack of auto focus, in-lens image stabilization or a pop up flash.
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Yesterday an older photographer was showing me his personal collection of cameras, many were folders, and all of them were silver.
Ernst are you sure on the 6 aperture blades?
I may of been mistaken and the pictures wont come up for me now to check, but when i looked at those picture a few days ago I counted a lot more than that and it made a quite a circular diaphram..which i thought was in tune for what people expect for out of focus rendering nowadays
If you look at the large photos on Voigtländer.de you can see that the back has small pin rollers, which some of the old folders have, and machined film rails, which most of the old folders don't have (they usually have a stamped metal frame). The modern film rails should improve film flatness.
Film flatness problems are hard to notice, unless you've compared a back or camera that has pretty good film flatness to something that has excellent film flatness, like a Linhof Super-Rollex back. It's a bit like the difference between using an open negative carrier and a glass negative carrier. You may be getting sharp results with the open negative carrier, but if you switch to glass, presuming the enlarger is properly aligned, you suddenly get SHARP results.
And what about its minimum focusing distance? Would be nice if one could do portraits with the thing (unlike Mamiya 7).
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Jan
personaly i find that all fixed lens camera of standard focal length, that minimum focus distance is close enough for portrait (head and torso/body shots). for head and shoulder shots i find its one of the limitations of this type camera--a longer lens is preferable