Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/03/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]IF I am not mistaken Linhof or SInar offer vacuum 4x5 film holder. If you think LEica lenses are expensive these filmholders are outrageous. Jerry Mike Johnston wrote: > > There is a 35mm camera (the Contax RTS III) with a vacuum back designed > specifically to keep the film flat. There either is, or will be, a > medium-format camera that has a vacuum back to keep the film flat (one > is promised for the Contax 645, which is selling like hotcakes BTW, > and--much to Contax's surprise--doing better in the USA than in home > market [which for Contax is Japan]). I don't know whether this is > actually available yet and I'm too lazy to go check. > > Film flatness is indeed a valid technical concern for specialist > photographers. It's just not of much practical concern to photographers > for pictorial photography--except sometimes when a frame with a "memory" > of a "set" curl creates obvious unsharpness in a negative--and sometimes > in large format. Which is why you don't see much effort to correct the > "problem" in the products on offer (Contax excepted, and I have a > feeling this has something to do with the fact that Kornelius Fleischer, > head of 35mm optics at Zeiss, is an aficionado of high-resolution > photography! He uses surveying tripods and has access to the legendary > Zeiss S-Planar process lenses for enlarging, lucky dog!) > > The Contax vacuum backs were based on the technology used for 10x10 > aerial reconnaissance and satellite photography. > > You think medium format is bad, try large format. It's been demonstrated > that the film not only does not lie flat, it can _move_ during > exposures. This can occur because of "sagging" or because of the film > suddenly being exposed to ambient humidity when the darkslide is pulled. > At any rate, measured with a micrometer, 4x5 film lies very far from > flat in a holder. In fact it resembles a rumply blanket. > > At least one of our contributors uses a special vacuum 4x5 back, and > another has devised a system whereby he uses five little patches of > double-stick tape on the inside of his 4x5 holder--he carefully loads > the film and then presses it lightly with his fingertips to make the > tape "engage" with the base side of the film. He then uses these holders > for very long exposures, so his film won't move or sag during the > exposure. > > --Mike