AlwaysOnAuto
Well-known
Well I took the camera out of its hiding place in an attempt to take a picture of the frame lines (how do they do that?) and ended up fondling the camera. It is such a sweet machine there's no way I could part with it. I'll have to come up with another way of utilizing the old lenses with a digital body I guess.
Thank you all for your input.
Thank you all for your input.
Pioneer
Veteran
Well I took the camera out of its hiding place in an attempt to take a picture of the frame lines (how do they do that?) and ended up fondling the camera. It is such a sweet machine there's no way I could part with it. I'll have to come up with another way of utilizing the old lenses with a digital body I guess.
Thank you all for your input.
That is EXACTLY why I cannot part with mine. It is a beat up user but it is so sweet to use that I can't keep my hands off of it. I use other cameras for awhile, then I pick up my M3, and off I go again!
Godfrey
somewhat colored
Well I took the camera out of its hiding place in an attempt to take a picture of the frame lines (how do they do that?) and ended up fondling the camera. It is such a sweet machine there's no way I could part with it. I'll have to come up with another way of utilizing the old lenses with a digital body I guess.
Thank you all for your input.
If you like it, even just to play with once in a bit, and don't have to sell it for the money to enable something else, yeah.
The Sony A7 is a good "one body fits all lenses" choice, but do keep in mind that some RF lenses simply don't match to its digital sensor particularly well, usually the shorter focal lengths. I bought the A7 as my digital Leica R surrogate: it performs beautifully with nearly all SLR lenses. The shorter M lenses are a bit more challenging to match to a sensor properly.
G
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