Cal,
I have largely divested myself of shooting 35mm until Robert posted his Retina IIa in the classifieds. I was toying with the notion of getting a Barnack again but that Retina popped up and I had to grab it. I had the same model camera maybe 11 years ago and it was great but it had lived on the California coast and the salt air didn't treat it well for half a century. Back then I didn't know as much as I do today about repair either. This Retina is going to get a shutter CLA and RF cleaning/calibration. It only has a 50mm f/2 Xenon which is a fantastic lens. I had the chance to use a 1946 uncoated version of that lens in an Adox Adrette II and the images were great. Anyway, the old Retina wound up in a parts bin because it cost so very little money and I had projects I wanted to do with it. The lens is still around here somewhere I think.
If I'm walking around with a Retina then I might want a wider lens like a 28 or 21mm so now I'm thinking of getting a wider lens for my Leica M4. Then I'm back into shooting with 35mm in spite of having the Mamiya 6. I suppose I could really do it right and just get another Mamiya 6 body so I could have one with the 75mm and one with the 50mm. Or one with Tri-X and one with Delta 3200. Either way, I hate changing lenses and really don't want to be limited by what is in the camera at the time. It's not cool having such a great system with amazing lenses and walking around with half a roll of 3200 ISO loaded during the daytime. I already use ND filters for Tri-X so the Delta is just insane and it makes me feel guilty shooting any of those lenses at f/16 or 22.
I really want a Super Angulon again but want to shoot it digitally. I actually
posted a thread asking members which SLR lenses, if any, could give me that look of the non-retrofocal superwides.
If I had a bunch of money to drop on it, I'd get a full frame Nikon digital body, yank the mirror out and stick the 2.1cm f/4 Nikkor O in there. Just finding a full frame camera cheap enough to do this mod is the problem. Perhaps I'll find a Kodak DCS Pro SLR/n for that job. A D600/610 could do it too. This is the terrain for a mirrorless design but I want the full frame of the Biogon formulation. That's where it's special.
I always loved any of my Leicas with a 21mm SA and that Zeiss finder mounted on top. What a fantastic kit.
I digress. A lot.
Phil Forrest