The long and difficult learning of rangefinder shooting.

gelmir

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A few months after around with my R2, here's the mistakes I believe every beginner must be going through 🙂

1) Shooting with the cap on. Ok, I won't do it anymore, I promise.

2) Shooting without focusing. You know, SLR habits...

3) Shooting with the wrong frameline 🙂

4) Forgetting to set the correct ISO. At least the R2 has a window on the backdoor.

5) Shooting with my hand in front of the lens ! At least a third of my last shots are featuring my fingers ! How do you handle that camera with a CV 35/2.5 Classic by the way ? It's so tiny. Perhaps I should have get the PII instead...

I guess there's some more minor troubles haven't experienced yet...

But I'm having a great time, really. I'm carrying my R2 everywhere, feeling free not to have to think about battery : my crappy digital compact camera used to go dead nearly every time I needed it... Sweet all mechanical camera ^^
 
after all these years i still do #5.

a few rolls of processed film ago, i thought i noticed some vignetting with the 35/2 but soon (painfully) realized it was my fat pinky finger again.
those really small lenses get me still.

joe
 
#2 and #3! The image in the viewfinder is clear on first glance so shoot! Oops, I forgot to focus. 50mm lens with 28mm framelines...why did I get less than I was framing? Yes, I have commited these errors in the last 3 rolls. This is so much fun that who cares, there my pictures and you'll never, never, never, see them. Fun, o yeah!
 
Can I add one? My cardinal sin is putting fingerprints over the front of the viewfinder! When I stop doing that I'll consider I have served my apprenticeship.
 
oh, I smudge up my vf all the time. The nice thing is, after a while, cleaning it off -- everything is so crisp and bright, it's like getting new glasses!

I was really guilty of Nos. 1 and 4, but I've made enough of thise errors recently to be more attentive. I suppose that won't last, though. 🙄
 
I've got a whole collection of fingers from my CV 15mm, waiting for a couple more before I put a full gallery of em. It's amazing how the fingers and everything else stays in focus when you shoot f/8 and above!
 
I have taken some beautiful pictures of the inside of my lens caps.

My lens cap in New York City. My lens cap on the beach at Cape Cod. My lens cap hiking in the Catskill Mountains, etc., etc. It is like a member of the family for all the times it has been photographed.

Still happens every now and again and I still fire off the occasional shot while trying to take a meter reading with the R3.
 
So far so good with me. I haven't done any of those things... yet. Luckily, one time I went to take a photo and someone said, "You might want to take the lens cover off." We both laughed and after I took the lens cap off. Thank goodness for kindly strangers.
 
May I recomend using a old filter instead of a lens cap? Its great because you protect the glass on the lens and in other terms you can use it just like a lens cap, and if you forget to take off the filter when you shoot the results will be pretty acceptable most of the time.

The only thing is that with lens sizes being all over the place for RFs, filters can be hard to find (im looking for one for my industar 22 at the moment, hah).
 
Since my R is TTL metered, I don't get lens cap shots anymore. Still working on the finger shots though - LOL.
 
Hi there,
Another rangefinder fan with smudgy fingerprints on his equipment pleads guilty....
Just one point w.r.t. the fingers showing up in the pictures, I'm a 35/2.5 classic user as well, I changed from focusing with my thumb pointing downwards to focusing with my thumb pointing upwards and hand below the lens, hereby having my "useless" fingers on the side of the camera and not on the side of the lens where they might block those perfect rays of light that are dying to jump onto my emulsion. (ps. do use the little focusing lever) Hope this helps making the list shorter.
Keep on shooting!!
 
einolu said:
May I recomend using a old filter instead of a lens cap? Its great because you protect the glass on the lens and in other terms you can use it just like a lens cap, and if you forget to take off the filter when you shoot the results will be pretty acceptable most of the time.

The only thing is that with lens sizes being all over the place for RFs, filters can be hard to find (im looking for one for my industar 22 at the moment, hah).



I have a warming filter on my Fuji, it has a filter factor of 1.2, so that is about a 1/3 of a stop, not enough to hurt anything. I forgot to take it off, once, and the shots were good.


Patrick
 
It took me 6 months to shake off the bad habit of shooting without focusing in the heat of the moment! I was so engrossed with the exposures that I forgot my R2 has no auto-focus! 😛
 
gelmir said:
A few months after around with my R2, here's the mistakes I believe every beginner must be going through 🙂
...not just "beginners," or maybe that I'm forever beginning 😉
gelmir said:
1) Shooting with the cap on. Ok, I won't do it anymore, I promise.
I take the cap off when the light's good, put it on when it isn't: that is, in
the morning through to bedtime. Now for the M6, I am always pointing
the lens away from bright--and reflected bright--light to avoid the slow
burn of the shutter curtain.
gelmir said:
2) Shooting without focusing. You know, SLR habits...
...yes, me too. But it's like a stopped clock that tells the correct time
twice a day: *something* is always in focus... well, sort of.
gelmir said:
3) Shooting with the wrong frameline 🙂
One of the benefits of separate RF and VF views... but for a RFVF combo, like
you have, you will soon "know" these less as constraints. When you can look
with both eyes, framelines become less of what you're looking at.
gelmir said:
4) Forgetting to set the correct ISO.
I still do this on occasion. But since I've begun shooting a particular ISO for
a particular session/event/light condition this becomes less troublesome.
gelmir said:
5) Shooting with my hand in front of the lens ! At least a third of my last shots are featuring my fingers ! How do you handle that camera with a CV 35/2.5 Classic by the way ? It's so tiny. Perhaps I should have get the PII instead...
I usually carry the camera in the right, with thumb up and between the film
advance lever and camera body... left hand comes up and under--rather than
from the side--as many do... I don't put many fingers in the lenses, BUT many a
stray camera strap enters the picture when shooting one handed! Whether small
or larger lens (and my largest is a 50mm Summilux, not too large), carrying/holding
the camera always in the right with a left hand up from under habit keeps the
lens free of me.
gelmir said:
I guess there's some more minor troubles haven't experienced yet...
*My* common misfire is the right hand index finger(second digit) tripping the shutter
when repositioning.
gelmir said:
But I'm having a great time, really. I'm carrying my R2 everywhere, feeling free not to have to think about battery : my crappy digital compact camera used to go dead nearly every time I needed it... Sweet all mechanical camera ^^
Before you become too convinced you don't need a battery, carry a spare... use some
gaffer tape and put it on your lens cap 🙂

Happy shooting!

rgds,
Dave
 
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