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Thread: Large Format or Medium Format for use on foot and sailboat

  1. #1

    Large Format or Medium Format for use on foot and sailboat

    I would like to expand my photo horizons from Nikon 35mm to either MF or LF primarily in landscapes, seascapes and other scenery by exploring on foot as well as on my 30' sailboat.

    Could you make a recommendation for a camera to use?

    I almost bought a Deardorff 5x7/4x5 but am still reluctant since it may be a bit cumbersome on the boat. I have also been advised to consider Rollei 6001 (since Hassy is a lot more $), Bronica ERTS/SQA(?) and Mamyia 645.

    Your comments and recommendations would be greatly appreciated.

  2. #2
    Founder QT Luong's Avatar
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    Large Format or Medium Format for use on foot and sailboat

    LF on a small sailboat could be problematic because of stability problems. The better seascapes are usually low-light and you might not be able to get shutter speeds fast enough. Set up might also be a problem, esp. with the wind. Personally I'd look into a 6x17 panoramic camera. Philippe Plisson, France's leading seascape photographer, uses those. I think the aspect ratio is great for seascapes. With a 6x6 format, I'd have a hard time finding a good background.

  3. #3

    Large Format or Medium Format for use on foot and sailboat

    You've got a 30' sailboat and you're worried about cost? What's your insurance run?

    Seriously though in medium a 6X9 Mamiya rangefinder, or the older & no-longer-made Linhoff Press or the Mamiya Universal.

    In large format there is a guy who takes airborne pictures of jets, while in the cockpit of another jet, using the old Graphic, which one, Speed, Crown, or otherwise I can't recall, but it's the one with the rear curtain shutter in addition to the lens leaf shutter. With that he can get speeds up to 1/1000. Try the Graphlex website for more info.

    Peter Gowland has made some odd/ionteresting large format cameras, TLR's and such and The Gran View is new- they advertise in Shutterbug & View Camera. Good Luck!

  4. #4

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    Large Format or Medium Format for use on foot and sailboat

    The Speed Graphic has the rear focal plane shutter. The otherwise identical Crown does not.

  5. #5

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    Large Format or Medium Format for use on foot and sailboat

    a speed graphic just might work. it's much cheaper than what you're thinking of so you might not consider it, but it claims 1/1000, and the curtain mechanism appears to be dirt simple and easy to clean which is important around salt water. you can hand-hold it and sight through a peep sight, or depending on the type of boat you have, you could through bolt a ball head to a cabin roof/deck for stability (i mean, at 30ft, you must have a keel. it's not like you're shooting from plywood dingy). if a speed graphic with a Kodak lens goes for a swim or takes a rogue wave you're only, say, five hundred dollars at risk, and you could probably save both the camera and the lens shutter from salt water damage yourself.

  6. #6

    Large Format or Medium Format for use on foot and sailboat

    FWIW,

    When Spielberg shot "Jaws" he assumed his cinematogrpher would use a gymbal mount on the tripod. The Cinematographer responded that no, the whole audience would get sea-sick, rather he should hand hold it, using his body as a natural cushion or shock absorber. But that's not still photography either.

  7. #7

    Large Format or Medium Format for use on foot and sailboat

    I've done a lot of shooting for sailing and kayking magazines both aboard our Hallberg Rassey 31 and aboard various other boats from 11 to 56 feet long. Though I love large format, my advice is to use the latest fastest most electronic Cannon or Nikon system aboard boats. If you are shooting stuff that will be printed really big use a Pentax 67 (or Mamiya 7, though I don't have experiance with the 7). The 6x7 image quality is not too far from 4x5, and you can't really use tilts and swings on a boat anyway, but conveniance goes way way up. The only way my field camera gets on a boat is in a sealed Pelican case. Of course that's the ideal thing: have a Nikon for use aboard and a field camera to take to shore. But I often use a Pentax 67 can for both.

    One more thing, why does everyone think only rich folks have 30-foot sailboats, when I bought mine (15 years ago) I was making less then 30k/yr - it's simply a matter of priorities, just like buying quality cameras and lenses.

    Chris

  8. #8

    Large Format or Medium Format for use on foot and sailboat

    Ken,

    Excellent recommendations--autoeverything Nikon or Canon if you want action, 6x17 for seascapes. I'd like to followup on Chris's thought of the Mamiya 7. I believe it's the lightest camera with the biggest negative and best grip, thus the easiest to handhold with one hand while hanging on with the other when the seas are up, IF your goal is big prints. See January Shutterbug article on Hassy with gyroscopic stabilizer for bridgetop shooting as an alternative, if holding on is not a priority.<g> Ted

  9. #9

    Large Format or Medium Format for use on foot and sailboat

    Maybe I'm wrong, but I believe $30k 15 years ago cannot be compared to $30k in '99.

  10. #10

    Join Date
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    Large Format or Medium Format for use on foot and sailboat

    For medium format I'd recommend a Pentax 67, and seal everything you can especia lly around the prism with tape. There's a good assortment of lenses, and the camera handles like a giant Nikon F2, Pentax Spotmatic etc. Do you live aboard? If so, give some serious consideration to some sort of air tight container and some silica gel cannisters; fungus just loves lenses kept on boats. If you do live aboard, I'd suggest otherwise thinking about a mechanical camer a such as a clean used Hasselblad if a new one is too expensive. The disadvantag e is that lenses will cost considerably more than Pentax lenses because you're b uying a shutter in every lens, but it may be a big advantage that there's no ele ctronics to turn green and corrode. I don't know about you, but the only piece of electronics I had that kept work ing more than a year was an Icom VHF that was so well-sealed that it could be sp rayed with a water hose and keep on working. Lightning got it, but that's anothe r story. Fair winds and following seas.

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