tetrisattack
Maximum Creativity!
I was leaving the registrar's office at school on Friday and I walked past the media loan department, where they had big posters up depicting their photo equipment. They had K1000's and ZX-M's for checkout, so I said, "well, heck, I have a lot of old pentax gear laying around, I wonder if this last year with rangefinders has changed how I work with an SLR. I'll check out a ZX-M and see." So I did (passing on the K1k because my other project for the easter weekend was testing film speeds, something best left to a camera with Av).
It was weird to use a zoom lens again. I felt a little lazy, not moving around to experiment with composition, so I mostly played with an older 50mm f/1.4. What a novelty, looking through the lens, being able to see what's in and out of focus! But at the same time, I felt frustrated by how difficult it was to get things properly focussed, and in fact, the scans that I'm making right now look pretty sketchy, especially the frames I shot at 1.4.
Now that the weekend's over, I've realized some strengths about rangefinders about which I was previously unaware. 50mm seems very constrictive on a SLR, and not so much on most rangefinders, because you get all that breathing room in the finder. I was trying to take a picture of my mom making an easter quiche but every time I tried to compose the shot I started wondering -- am I including everything in the frame that I ought to be? I had to keep lowering the camera to check. Also, since everything is in focus in my rangefinder's viewfinder, I'm more conscious of near-far relationships between objects in my composition. And I find it easier to judge true focus with my rangefinder than with any of my pentaxes, even in spite of their luxurious horizontal split + microprism-collar viewfinders.
And to think that my chief anxiety when moving from a DSLR to a rangefinder was: how will I ever be certain about how the image will look, and how will I ever know what will be in focus without DOF preview? Oh, the folly of inexperience.
Lastly, I've found it a valuable reminder about luxury to go back and shoot with my pentax glass. Not that the 50's were that wretched (they're quite nice in terms of pleasing contrast and wide-open bokeh) but the resolution isn't up to par with the leica/zeiss glass I'm now used to.
Have any of you out in RFF-land had a similar experience recently?
It was weird to use a zoom lens again. I felt a little lazy, not moving around to experiment with composition, so I mostly played with an older 50mm f/1.4. What a novelty, looking through the lens, being able to see what's in and out of focus! But at the same time, I felt frustrated by how difficult it was to get things properly focussed, and in fact, the scans that I'm making right now look pretty sketchy, especially the frames I shot at 1.4.
Now that the weekend's over, I've realized some strengths about rangefinders about which I was previously unaware. 50mm seems very constrictive on a SLR, and not so much on most rangefinders, because you get all that breathing room in the finder. I was trying to take a picture of my mom making an easter quiche but every time I tried to compose the shot I started wondering -- am I including everything in the frame that I ought to be? I had to keep lowering the camera to check. Also, since everything is in focus in my rangefinder's viewfinder, I'm more conscious of near-far relationships between objects in my composition. And I find it easier to judge true focus with my rangefinder than with any of my pentaxes, even in spite of their luxurious horizontal split + microprism-collar viewfinders.
And to think that my chief anxiety when moving from a DSLR to a rangefinder was: how will I ever be certain about how the image will look, and how will I ever know what will be in focus without DOF preview? Oh, the folly of inexperience.
Lastly, I've found it a valuable reminder about luxury to go back and shoot with my pentax glass. Not that the 50's were that wretched (they're quite nice in terms of pleasing contrast and wide-open bokeh) but the resolution isn't up to par with the leica/zeiss glass I'm now used to.
Have any of you out in RFF-land had a similar experience recently?