P
pshinkaw
Guest
I just ran a couple of rolls of film thru my Retina IIIS. My first "trial by fire" since I acquired it a few weeks ago. I shot a High School Awards ceremony and a Middle School Band Concert. Both indoors and both with an "eyeball burner" Sunpak 522 flash.
One of the reasons I wanted the IIIS was to have a leaf shutter camera with interchangeable lenses to use with a powerful flash. I was tired of dealing with ghost images from ambient light and the slow speeds of most focal plane shutter cameras. However, I also needed a longer lens than the 45-50mm that most fixed lens leaf shutter cameras come with.
I used both the 135/4.0 Tele-Xenar and the 50/1.9 Xenon. Both were very sharp. The problem I did not think about before hand was that even though the IIIS has a 135mm frame in the viewfinder, because it is a rangefinder camera the image within the frame is very small. That makes accurate focusing inside that little rectangle even harder at ranges out to 50 feet or more. Many of my 135mm shots were blurry from focusing errors.
On the plus side, when I changed from the 135mm to the 50mm, the new lens was automatically set at the same f number as the old lens. I took several shots before I thought to check and was pleasantly surprised to find that my exposure was the same because the f-stop setting is actually made on the camera body rather than the lens.
Another problem I never considered before was advancing the film on a bottom lever camera when the camera is mounted on a handle mount flash bracket.
The IIIS is a really great camera, but it might not have been designed with this particular type of photographic activity in mind.
-Paul
One of the reasons I wanted the IIIS was to have a leaf shutter camera with interchangeable lenses to use with a powerful flash. I was tired of dealing with ghost images from ambient light and the slow speeds of most focal plane shutter cameras. However, I also needed a longer lens than the 45-50mm that most fixed lens leaf shutter cameras come with.
I used both the 135/4.0 Tele-Xenar and the 50/1.9 Xenon. Both were very sharp. The problem I did not think about before hand was that even though the IIIS has a 135mm frame in the viewfinder, because it is a rangefinder camera the image within the frame is very small. That makes accurate focusing inside that little rectangle even harder at ranges out to 50 feet or more. Many of my 135mm shots were blurry from focusing errors.
On the plus side, when I changed from the 135mm to the 50mm, the new lens was automatically set at the same f number as the old lens. I took several shots before I thought to check and was pleasantly surprised to find that my exposure was the same because the f-stop setting is actually made on the camera body rather than the lens.
Another problem I never considered before was advancing the film on a bottom lever camera when the camera is mounted on a handle mount flash bracket.
The IIIS is a really great camera, but it might not have been designed with this particular type of photographic activity in mind.
-Paul