- I was focusing on color slides - this implied that pictures should look fine "as is": there is no easy way to do cropping on a slide: at the wide angle end, one can typically work with fixed focal lengths and adjust the picture composition by taking a couple steps - at the narrow angle end (70 mm focal length and beyond) this is often not practicable, so I wanted a tele-zoom lens
- I was frequently taking pictures inside buildings, or in streets and narrow locations, etc., so I also wanted to expand to focal lengths below 50 mm
- Inside buildings, the lighting is usually critical (this was the time of analog film, so at 400 ASA one would already start getting grainy pictures), so I wanted the focal lengths at 50 mm and below with large (but still affordable) apertures
- For macro photography I wanted to add extension rings again - but automatic ones, if possible, as this makes macro photography so much easier.
- One thing I had been missing with the Topcon was flexibility with the viewfinder: the preferred viewfinder screen depends on the type of lens attached (no autofocus at that time!), e.g.: for macro photography one wanted a clear viewfinder, for low light conditions a fresnel lens with focusing aid is better, and for architecture photography I was often missing a grid that helps getting the photo straight (again, there is only so much straightening one can to while framing a slide!)
- And of course I was looking for a camera body (and Nikon somehow appeared to be the obvious choice to me) that wold give me all this flexibility ....
- 24 mm f/2, 35 mm f/1.4, and 50 mm f/1.4 fixed focal length lenses
- 80 - 200 mm f/4 Telezoom lens
- Nikon flash SB-16A
- a leather enclosure that I never used (always had the camera in a bag)
- additional viewfinder screens C, G2, G3, and R - the only one I ended up using is "R" (Grid)
- a set of automatic extension rings
- filters & other, small stuff
- time went on, of course, and not too long after my purchase, cameras with autofocus started appearing — and there I was with all my lenses with manual focusing ...
- for me as a non-professional photographer, a single viewfinder screen ("R", with the grid) would have been sufficient;
- the most popular lenses were the 80 - 200 mm f/4 telezoom and the 35 mm f/1.4; I often found pictures from the 50 mm lens "boring", "ordinary" - and also the 24 mm f/2 wasn't used very heavily. It was OK for architecture and in buildings, but for landscape, pictures often had a "flat" appearance;
- I should have switched to the high-eyepoint viewfinder when that became available it's just easier to work with;
- I ended up doing far less macro photography than anticipated. Actually, I could cover most of my "close-up" needs by using the telezoom at a focal length of 200 mm at its minimum distance of 1.2 m
A hazy autumn afternoon on lake Pfäffikon / ZH Image scanned from color slide, using a Nikon Super CoolScan 5000 ED slide scanner, 4000 dpi |
Also this camera story ends with an anecdote (this time without accident / bloodshed!), indicating how much I had lost interest in analog photography in the end: when I was about to sell the F3 and wanted to turn it in for repair in 2007, I realized that the exposure counter indicated 35 photos: I turned the rewind handle - and indeed there was still a film in the camera, with pictures taken 5 years earlier, up in Northern Finland!! I sent in the film for development, and — as expected — I received a set of color slides with awfully degraded photos; I spent a couple hours in attempts to restore the original colors — so far (I'll give it another try) the result is very modest ...
1 comment:
Well, at least for a non-foto-expert (like me), all this equipment of yours must have been looking VERY impressing! I like the pic from the Pfäffikersee! Very poetic :-)
PS: I know exactly WHO lost that Fuji camera. But will keep it a secret ;-) And now that I'm living in London, I can retake all the pictures as many time as I want to! If I only remembered what we photographed with that Fuji...
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