dcsang
Canadian & Not A Dentist
Whilst taking a break from the boredom that is the office I was outdoors carrying my M2 and on my way to my local camera shop to get some prints done.
As I walked along, I walked by our local city hall and the skating rink which occupies the fountain that usually exists in its place during the summertime.
I took out my M2 and snapped off a number of photos of the Zamboni which slowly rolled its way around the ice surface.
What I loved was the fact that I had these lines within the viewfinder showing me where the edge of the frame was.
Yes, I know that this is not a huge revelation - heck it's not like I'm the first guy to enjoy the frameline in a viewfinder - but because I go back and forth between DSLR and RF cameras it's always nice to "know the frame".
The Canon 5D (or any Canon that I've used; both film and digital) is a good camera and it does an excellent job at many things but there aren't any framelines in that viewfinder and the viewfinder is not 100% so you end up sometimes getting too much; getting too little or just not "getting it" when it comes to snapping the image.
The trade off of course is that the viewfinder on an RF camera is merely that; a viewfinder and it is not seeing exactly what the lens is seeing, hence the need for framelines I would imagine. 😀
But with those framelines I'm happy to say that it does help in composition (I think) and makes me feel a bit more "secure" in knowing I've "got it" when it comes to snapping the image.
Now if only I can learn to let go and shoot freely.......
Cheers,
Dave
As I walked along, I walked by our local city hall and the skating rink which occupies the fountain that usually exists in its place during the summertime.
I took out my M2 and snapped off a number of photos of the Zamboni which slowly rolled its way around the ice surface.
What I loved was the fact that I had these lines within the viewfinder showing me where the edge of the frame was.
Yes, I know that this is not a huge revelation - heck it's not like I'm the first guy to enjoy the frameline in a viewfinder - but because I go back and forth between DSLR and RF cameras it's always nice to "know the frame".
The Canon 5D (or any Canon that I've used; both film and digital) is a good camera and it does an excellent job at many things but there aren't any framelines in that viewfinder and the viewfinder is not 100% so you end up sometimes getting too much; getting too little or just not "getting it" when it comes to snapping the image.
The trade off of course is that the viewfinder on an RF camera is merely that; a viewfinder and it is not seeing exactly what the lens is seeing, hence the need for framelines I would imagine. 😀
But with those framelines I'm happy to say that it does help in composition (I think) and makes me feel a bit more "secure" in knowing I've "got it" when it comes to snapping the image.
Now if only I can learn to let go and shoot freely.......
Cheers,
Dave