Ernst Dinkla
Well-known
Abbazz said:I
A folder with a decent lens is far more capable than a 10MP digital SLR. The DSLR might be more convenient to use, but a good folder in capable hands will still produce better pictures.
You admit that a 14MP digital rangefinder can come close in quality to an MF film scanned, therefore acknowledging the superior quality of MF film.
I like it.
Cheers!
Abbazz
The verdict on better IQ from digital cameras or MF film isn't there yet and the progress in quality: S/N, dynamic range, resolution is not happening at the film side as we both know. At the time we get the virtual MF folder presented there's a much more concrete 25 Sony FF announced and three 14 MP APS size DSLRs with HDR qualities will be available within 6 months. In all digital cases with optics that are more optimised than what is made available for analogue film these days. The Fuji folder has at best a Heliar type lens as any good Planar or Sonnar would be too heavy. There's a nice analogy in the Schneider lens catalogue, compare the Digitars with the Symmars for film, the first are just better. A good friend with a Sinar back has the right equipment to compare the Nikon 35 mm lenses, the Hasselblad Zeiss lenses, the Digitars, the Symmars on that MF back. The Digitars are the best hands down. If MF film has to beat the DSLRs announced these days it should be in an Alpa type camera with the customised Linhof film holder + 220 film for extreme flatness and a Biogon or Digitar lens to get the resolution you need. On Dynamic range you have to be careful with B&W and in color you better forget slide film. In a hybrid analogue/digital workflow the scanner should at least be a Nikon LS9000 with wet mounting or a well kept and operated drum scanner. A complete analogue workflow faces the same problems with film flatness and another optical path that is in the scanning and picture taking steps. If I write about equal outcome from MF film compared to today's digital it is with that in mind and not a Tessar, Heliar, 80 mm f3.5 on folder struts transmitting light on 6x7 frames of plain 120 roll stock.
The "I like it" is the same term I use to explain my Iskra, Bessa, Monitor, converted Polaroid 160 use. I also considered it as a nice stop gap solution between 35 mm analogue dying and digital photography coming to age. Yesterday bicycling I had my Iskra with me and a small Fuji digital compact. The Iskra loaded with Tmax that will be developed in a Jobo Autolab 1000 and scanned on a Nikon LS8000 in wet mounting then printed on a HP Z3100. There's fun in some aspects but I do not think my image quality is optimal now or will be optimised by a new MF folder. For that I trust the digital developments more and I hope that the "I like it" feeling is one day represented in a digital rangefinder that has the better image quality but at the same time offers it in a compact and uncomplicated way. I might go for a DSLR if it takes too long but I'm afraid it will not bring that feeling back.
I know I wouldn't buy the Fuji. Even if it had a 65mm lens and a 48 x 83 mm frame size to keep the film more flat and fit my LS8000 on length to get the extra square inches. Not for a lower price like 500 $ either. I might spend a total of 1500 $ hours on tinkering a camera like that but that's the other part of the fun factor. Suits old cameras better than new ones 🙂
Not going to spoil the fun of potential buyers anymore so this is the last of my opinions on this camera proposal.
Ernst Dinkla