I would take a Mamiya 6 or Mamiya 7 or maybe a Pentax 6x7. There are good lenses available for all of them and they easy to travel with.
I would take a Mamiya 6 or Mamiya 7 or maybe a Pentax 6x7. There are good lenses available for all of them and they easy to travel with.
If you need some telephoto reach for wildlife, a basic Pentax 6x7 SLR system is something already having high repute in Africa photography. I often travel with one of those for tripod or otherwise supported tele work, along with a Fuji 6X9 rangefinder with a 90mm lens for quicker handheld or tripod wider angle shots. Both can be had for less than the cost of a Mamiya 7, which has a far more limited selection of focal lengths than a P67, but would be a much lighter weight more compact package.
Nice! I'm interested in the earlier models because its quite tempting to have a longer lens for portraits. I looked at the other formats online, and for some reason they are all much more expensive than the 6x9. I'm not really worried about the cost of film for a 6x9, as its nothing compared to the cost of the trip, so I would feel pretty comfortable shooting 6x9 images I intend to print square.
Yes. I suspect my wife will take a SLR with a 200 zoom and I'll pick up a 2x teleconverter for birds and such, but don't really care that much. A lot of the fun I have is printing, so a good negative is important (I don't have a color printer, and my scanner is too old to work with my current computer!)
Can’t say good enough things about this camera, also called the Texas Leica! I have the Mark III version along with the GSW690 a wider companion fixed lens camera. The only downsides are that it is fully manual (no built in meter) so you need a separate meter, and the rangefinder patch isn’t super big or bright but it will suffice. The modern update, the Fujifilm GF670 with built in meter and improved rangefinder is a step up but even second hand its 2 or 3 times the cost of the GW690, plus I much prefer the 6x9 format over 6x7 since you have more optionality even if you burn up more film as a consequence.
The tool forms the user as much as the user forms with the tool. So it is an important choice, and much depends on the type/look of the images one would like to make. For example, movements allow for more possibilities in image management (image-creating). I am biased in this direction, so if weight, time, patience of fellow traveler(s), etc don't out weigh having camera movements, I take LF. A recent month visit to Japan w/ my two boys, I took the Rolleicord. A previous month-long camping trip in Southern Chile w/ my two boys I took the 5x7 (in 2019). Different experiences, different tools.
A possible compromise would be a light 4x5 or even smaller view camera with a couple 120 roll backs (or three...for different films and/or formats) . Perhaps a 65mm/135mm/210mm lens combo.
"Landscapes exist in the material world yet soar in the realms of the spirit..." Tsung Ping, 5th Century China
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