Echoing others here, I'd suggest a speed/crown graphic as an original point and shoot, but perhaps with a 90mm if convenience is a factor. Speed graphics are definitely convenient.
At some point of wideness, you need to drop the bed out of the way to keep it out of the picture. I had a 75mm Nikkor for a while but didn't test it on the speed graphic, so I don't know if that's too wide so I can't guarantee that combination. Perhaps someone else knows. I use a 90/4.5 Nikkor on my speed graphics with great success. No need to drop the bed. This is with pre and postwar speed graphics. If I used a physically smaller lens like a 90/6.8 optar, I could fold it right up into the box too when you are not shooting. The bed makes a nice sun shade if you are shooting handheld. Use the camera upside down if the sun/rain is coming down from above. If you are shooting vertical, orient the bed to block a low sun angle.
The speed graphics with the metal pop-up hoods are especially handy for point and shoot use as the hood makes it easy to pre-focus on the groundglass without a dark-cloth. The cloth-sided hoods on WWII and earlier ones are better than nothing, but not as nice as the fully metal viewing hoods.
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