R
ruben
Guest
I'm a little puzzled ... I have a Super Ikonta A 6x4.5 from the mid thirties and decided to use it yesterday for something totally different to shoot the computer students I'm currently bothering on a regular basis for a six week photographic project. I loaded it with HP5 and in fact used two rolls to do some candid portraits during the day. It's a nice little camera but quite fiddly to use with the left hand shutter release and a viewfinder that's a little like looking through a shower curtain ... but I figured the uncoated 75mm Tessar lens might give me the look I was searching for so it would hopefully be worth the effort ... which it was!
There's not a lot of light in the area I was shooting in so I was down to f 3.5 and 1/25 sec and was a bit dismayed when I scanned the negs this morning to discover some shots (a lot in fact) have motion blur. I can hand hold a 35mm rangefinder down to 1/8 sec no problem and if I get blur it's usually because the subject is moving. I don't know if it's the left hand shutter release, which although unfamiliar is very smooth in it's action, or is MF (particularly an old folder) just harder to achieve decent hand held results with at really low shutter speeds.
It's not a complete disaster because I have plenty of keepers out of the two rolls and the lens definitely gave me what I was looking for ... but I'm curious about other people's opinions and experiences when using these old folders with their quirky handling.
Hi Keith,
For an Iskra proud owner like you, who made that great cat image, you deserve the punishment you got with the Super Ikonta
But now seriously. I do not know the measure of smoothness of the SI shutter. In case it is smooth, and due to the fact that you tried to lower the shutter speed I can assume the shutter IS smooth, then come the following considerations.
a) As you know for sure, there is the rule of 1 to 1, meaning that if you are shooting with a 35mm focal length lens, you will be sure by doing it at a speed of 1/30. Of course I understand that you said you can go quite lower from the rule, but it will be of interest to know which focal length is the lens on your SI.
b) You yourself testify in your post about not feeling comfortable with the griping of the camera. This is a factor for you to take a seat and find a comfortable gripping. With some cameras it takes time.
c) Much more than a softie, you can most of the time provide more stability to a camera by using a bracket, provided you are comfortable with it. The best brackets ever are the ultra light ultra cheapo "Kaiser" trademark bracket, about which you may hear below horror stories of parroquian preacher type. Ignore them.
We mostly do not use brackets but softies to save space in our comfortable rangefinders, but for a folder, which already is not as compact as a rangefinder, you can add a bracket, and also the softie - why not !
From highest stability to lowest, my scale of devices go this way
a) tripod
b) monopod
c) side bracket
d) softie
d) A monopod too is something to be. Again, for a folder, the cheapest plastic low weight monopod will win against the heavy, pro-looking, monopod that will cost you a fortune, will come decapitated, and will be condemned to life sentence to your closet, for being heavy.
e) In one of the languages going on out there, there is a saying running something like "the best rider, still might be thrown down by its horse". So don't desperate, strange accidents take place in photography as in every other field, and any darkroom is the place where most of them will be waiting for you. Just to cheer up your spirit, brother.
Cheers,
Ruben
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