Issy said:
Not true. I like rangefinders a lot. I like the small size. I like the quality of the lenses -- I love how painfully sharp my Contax 45 planar is...I like the quiet of the the Leica. I like the fact my M4-P doesn't scream "major league photographer here" to most people, including my 16 month old daughter who has learned to mug for the big SLR... but
These are the reasons why I learned to use RFs too, and there are more good reasons: Distortion free wides and super wides for my cityscapes, easy focusing at night also with slow lenses (!), no mirror blackout, all mechanical.
Composing is hard tho with an RF, this stuff outside the framelines I find distracting too and it is not easy to "think it off" for the composition. Not to speak of the ridiculous effect of intruding lens barrels at big high speed lenses.
The WYSIWYG effect of the SLR screen is unsurpassable, (and undispensible for tele), extremely obvious on MF screens. Withinn a second you recognize if it is all in balance or not. And I think this is the perception of the very most photogs and the reason for the conquest of the SLRs in the 60s, tho they were terrible beasts in those days. Loud, heavy, dark and grainy screens getting even darker by metering stopped down .
Composing is not the whole task tho , sometimes it isn't part of the task at all, and some of the disadvantages of the SLR concept are still not eliminated.This grants a place to survive for my RF cameras.
Shooting with those finders is a PIA tho, I fully agree ! Taking my SLR after a longer period of RF use each time I think aaarrrghh, why do I torture myself with these finders ???????
😀
bertram