I am in love with TLRs and beside the 3,5F there are many other that would suit right as well, the Delta 400 is a great general purpose film, gives great clarity and matches very well with the Planar
i am always amazed at setting such strong parameters.
Like deciding for one year, to have corn flakes,
cream and black tea for every meal.Why!
Yes use one camera more regularly.
I love using color in my images.
I enjoy developing and scanning my B/W films.
Leica often the favorite but i would simply hate
not to be able to see and construct images with a SLR..
My Leica is used in very simple manner.
No meter. One lens, the 50mm Collapsible Summicron,
or a 35mmGoggles Summaron. Not both!
Film.One roll till finished. That day or in a few weeks.
Had 4~5 frames for St Patrick's Day Parade..
Then i went Digital.
Photography should be fun and pleasing.
Whether you are on a paid assignment or oneself.
Nikon F5 with AF-S NIKKOR 35mm F1.4G. Tri-X.
A choice between auto and manual focus.
The automatic exposure is brilliant. Manual override if you wish.
(Would have used a smaller and lighter F6 if I could find one at a reasonable price.)
I have a little padded back pack that does a nice job of holding My Crown Graphic along with 6 film holders.
BTW the rangefinder on the camera doesn't work so I've already figured some figures for zone focusing for hand held shooting at ISO 1600 F-22 and F 32 at 1/400th of a second.
Back in the day when film was all we had and cameras were not so cheap I only ever had one camera at any time, maybe two lenses at most and usually either Tri-X or Ektachrome loaded.
With the rise of digital and film cameras being cheap there is a tendency to accumulate stuff. With me too many cameras seems to result in less actual photography. So the idea is sound if it helps you get out and actually do some photography.
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.