-
• #22902
Sure is!
-
• #22903
Bronica ETRSi
looking good!
-
• #22904
I enquire with Leica to get a .58x viewfinder fitted on my M2. ~£1k as an estimate. Cheapest M6 .58x I've seen its £2.5k. Usually going for about 3-5k. Either way much monies.
Look for cheaper alternatives, came across a M4 type aperture finder from DAG which gives you 20% more view.. check prices to acquire and replace. £100/150
What did I do instead? Open the Leica without the correct tools and remove the thing. Can see a lot more than before and I still have money in my pocket.
-
• #22905
3 to 5k for a m6, ive not seen anything like that on M6s.
-
• #22907
Anyone got opinions about the Leica R3? I can get hold of a body in good condition for 200 euros
-
• #22908
Leica R lenses are great, only issue is the electronics in R bodies aren't always the most reliable. I do love my R4 though!
-
• #22909
madness! I love it. I have a 0.72 M6 that does 28mm framelines though, do you want wider?
-
• #22910
Indeed madness. The .58x magnification would help with the fact I wear glasses so I never see the full frame lines specially on wider lenses. When I had the M3 I couldn't see the frame lines of the 50mm.
-
• #22911
same here; glasses. I just inshallah
part of the charm for RF for me is never being able to see what I will be getting in the pic
I wish you luck, I hate M3 (esp the finder)
-
• #22912
Thank you, yeah I'm the same. M2 much better than M3, hence why I swapped them.
-
• #22913
Wow!
-
• #22914
Do you use a diopter on the viewfinder? I got one for my M bodies (they are transferable) and it helped with focus and the framelines. If you go to one of the Leica dealers they have a few you can try.
-
• #22915
Haven't had the chance to test them. My understanding of how they work is that I'd have to take my glasses off still, but the diopter replaces my glasses prescription. Which is soemthing I don't want to be doing as I can do that now.
-
• #22916
It allows you to get your eye closer to the eyepiece which means you can see the frame lines. The diopter does replace your glasses prescription but it's not the same prescription because the diopter interacts with your eye and the focus patch in a different way.
I couldn't get the glasses on no diopter combo to work as well. Long story short, in most cases if you're shooting outdoors with glasses on in good light you're usually shooting at smaller apertures to the point where the camera operates as a point and shoot. If you're trying to dial in a noctilux in a nightclub then you need to have a very good view of the focus patch.
-
• #22917
First couple of rolls through the Rolleicord, really like the lens!
2 Attachments
-
• #22918
And some Lomo purple
3 Attachments
-
• #22919
Some shots from the second roll through the M6. This is all Ilford HP5 pushed to 800, and I only included the photo of the cat because I’m just stunned by the sharpness of the Voigtlander Nokton 35/1.4 on film shot at 800. I’ve never taken film photos that sharp before.
4 Attachments
-
• #22920
A while back I sold all of my film SLRs and lenses.
I regret it.
I'd like to shoot some film again but I fancy something super simple, compact, point and shoot.
Mainly portraits.
I was thinking maybe Lomo or something with that kind of look to the images.
I've not gone down this route before so I'm after any camera recommendations. ThanksI love the look of the Lomo purple photos on this page by @mi7rennie . What camera are you using?
Also like from a few pages back @YeahNerdz on the Canon Sureshot Max
-
• #22921
I'm after any camera recommendations. Thanks
what's your budget?
-
• #22922
Low. I'm hoping less than £100. I've also today been eyeing up some really cheap Lomo cameras.
I guess I'm after a sort of Lo-Fi vibe. I want to start taking photos of days out with my kids and friends and building up physical photo albums. -
• #22923
It sounds like a (any) lo-fi automatic / point-and-shoot it is then, and frankly you would not get one of the nicer / higher end ones anyways for under 100 these days 💁
Every now and then somebody offers some from their drawer in the for sale thread on here, I'd also check local classifieds, eBay etc. although you have to have a bit of luck to get something in good shape for an ok price.
Checking out flea markets / garage sales could also be worthwhile if you have those where you live.Just one piece of advice - while I think your idea of building physical photo albums (from analogue shots) is very nice you are likely to burn through film quickly, especially with photographing kids - and cost of film and dev / scans / prints etc. will sum up 🚀.
That's the real cost factor, not so much the camera itself.
I know it's a different thing but maybe consider shooting digitally, and have nice prints made from just the best shots. -
• #22924
That’s good advice, thank you.
Part of the reason is that I want to change my photo habits . I never get anything printed but also hardly ever look through photos on my computer, or Instagram or wherever photos end up. -
• #22925
get yourself a sigma merrel. DP.
it’s the analog photographers digital camera. it’s very slow to use, eats batteries, has an rubbish menu, a screen that’s useless in bright sunshine, crappy/clunky software and a fixed lens.
amazing results though and very much worth the effort.
Norwich?