Allan Reade
Established
This is from my second roll of film shot with the C3. Still getting used to the square format.
Allan Reade



Allan Reade
Chris, great pictures. I was attracted to the Mamiya for the close-focussing ability, too. My budget limited me to an older C3, but I got it with the 65mm and 180mm lenses, old series.
Keith, thanks for your comments. I'm enjoying the camera but it will be a while before I can compose and focus fast enough to get reasonable hand-held shots.
Allan
Chris, I've made my own paramender out of a 50mm length of aluminium tubing with a wide slot cut out lengthwise so it fits around the shaft of the tripod head. Once I've composed close shots I raise the head till I can fit the tubing, then lower it so it sits snugly on the tubing. Now all I need to do is master the photography side 🙂
Allan
I really enjoyed touring your website, Chris. Good pictures. There is a spaciousness in them that I find evocative. Here are a couple more from the C3 80/2.8.
The streaking is very apparent in the sky portions. I've taken the negs back to the lab (Toronto Image Works) so they can trouble-shoot.
Absolutely. I swore up and down myself about five years ago that I wouldn't go back to a darkroom. Here I am now, souping another set of HP5+ in 120. At least I'm not wet printing. Oh. I can't believe I just said that out loud. There is a Beseler in the basement somewhere. Nahhh... If I can keep the chemical process to HC-110 and a couple of daylight tanks and then digitize the negs.... I can deal with this....
Thanks for passing on your experience with the Alb. lab. I know that when I see these guys tonight I'm likely to get a similar response as you did. Even though I showed them some Velvia shot in the same camera that they processed on the same day....
Ah well. At least I can deal with the B&W processing on my own.
Those SOBs at Picture Perfect in ABQ claimed ...
I'm very interested in square format myself at the moment and a friend has offered to lend me his Mamiya C330 with a few lenses to give me a chance to evaluate it against my two Rolleis, a Cord and a T.
Hi Alan,
Nice photos! I like the lighting in the first photo quite a bit. The shapes in the second dphoto are cool also.
I find the square format has actually helped my photography a lot. It's hard to explain, and I am not exactly sure the reason. IMy theory is that I am framing my photos better using the waist level finder and that is lending to better photography in general. I thought I loved looking through my OM2 viewfinder but once I used a TLR for the first time, it changed everything.
I have recently bought a Exakta 66 to accompany my TLR collection so that should be fun.
Cheers,
Scott
This is from my second roll of film shot with the C3. Still getting used to the square format.
Did you get the modern rubber-covered Exakta 66? Those are interestig cameras. They really aren't Exaktas, the name was just used by the West German marketing company that sold them. They were really Pentacon 6 cameras covered in the modern rubber material to obscure thier true origen. They take good photos...the marketer had Schneider lenses made for them!