Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/11/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 08:55 07/11/97 -0600, you wrote: >> me, look quite different, and I greatly prefer that angle of view for a >> moderate wideangle. The landscapes I do with a 28 don't work with a 35- >> it >> just isn't quite wide enough to do what I want to. I'm now doing 90% of >> my M >> photography with just a 28 and a 50. >> Joe Berenbaum > >joe, whatever works for you - but if you are doing a lot of landscapes, >have you considered moving to 4 x 5? >steven > >ps; 28 & 50 only - which body works best for this kit? i'm an m3 guy... Yes, I've considered it, but I've got Chronic Fatigue Syndrome quite severely and I just can't do that much physical manipulation. I need an easier system. I'm pretty certain that large format and my present condition are incompatible. To be able to tote an M6 with a 28mm lens on it is a good compromise- I just wish they'd made a Rollei 35 with a 28mm lens. I do sometimes use a very lightweight Gitzo tripod that is like a large stick insect and is usable only in breeze-free conditions. The only cameras I've got that I can use that give appreciably larger negs but don't take a lot of fiddling around with are Rollei TLRs (the Rollei T is borderline heavy, but very quick and easy to use and worth a bit of lugging) and a 6x9 Super Ikonta. I've considered a Fuji GSW 6x9 RF but not tried one. The body that works best for me with a 28 + 50 lens is anything that has the 28mm viewfinder frame in the body- I use an M6 and an M4-2 with M4-P frames. I use a separate viewfinder for a 20mm Russar, occasionally, but I really like the 28 frame to be built-in since I use the 28 a lot. Joe Berenbaum