As it is your first one I'll get a cheap monorail, this is 155€ plus shipping:
https://www.ebay.es/itm/Cambo-SC-II-...kAAOSwzUVdGgSO
A monorail has all movements so it's ideal to learn and to practice. It would also help you to understand what features you want and what limitations you would allow in a future field camera. This is a modular camera system, so you may attach several cameras inline (
https://www.flickr.com/photos/125592...5/27823423611/ ) for any need, you have "unlimited" bellows draw.
A rail of the cambo can be DIY made with any 25mm square pipe, just cut the length you want. It's also sturdy, just the kind of camera you may throw downhill and all that can be broken are those stones in the camera path.
It weights a bit more than 4kg, so it cannot be recommended for long hikes, anyway many LF practitioners want to have a monorail in his arsenal, so its a good starting point.
Another remarkable piece of gear suitable to start in LF would be a SINAR Norma, first all metal camera ever (from 1948, IIRC), quite more refined than a CAMBO SC, but more expensive and less sturdy, see here how it handles a near 2kg lens in the front standard:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/125592...5/47092537484/
Ansel Adams used (at least) the 5x7" variant, here with the 4x5 reduction back:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-ZCEXWdIMg
To me best way is to start is a monorail and to get a lot of fun practicing all movements, the 155€ investment is worth because with that learning you will later make less mistakes in gear acquisition.
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The same with lenses, don't spend much money in glass until you learn what you want. A general usage lens can do all, but LF lenses (I guess) have way more nuances than in smaller formats. There are specialized glass for landscape (lightweight, hikking), architecture (large circle) or for portraiture (
https://www.largeformatphotography.i...rtrait-lenses/)
I'd start with a 150€ Symmar 150mm f/5.6 convertible to 265mm f/12 (
https://www.ebay.es/itm/Schneider-Kr...IAAOSw4lNdf~3r)
https://www.kenrockwell.com/schneider/150.htm
https://kenrockwell.com/tech/exposure-large-format.htm
These are two focals for 150€, it is single coated so you will learn to control flare.
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You'll have to invest in many fields, so you should keep some bugget for film, film holders, development gear, tripod, focusing loupe, meter, dark cloth, and perhaps a well equipped darkroom with enlarger, paper...
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