Nuffles
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 177
- Name
- Jack
- Edit My Images
- Yes
I was lucky enough to be given this camera with a load of other photographic stuff a while back. After some quick research it looks like it's a very early one - it has a reversing back fitted. They were brought out in 1924, and changed to a rotating back in 1926. It's standard film size is 3.5x4.5 sheets and I originally gave it a miss fearing complexity. While clearing out the garage before I came to uni I found a 6x9 MF back for it and gears began turning. Now at uni I can dev colour/bw film for free and scan it in on either half decent Epson flat beds, or industry standard £20,000 beasts, or print it in the darkrooms. I decided to give the MF back a shot and see what results I got. I found that the shutter speeds are pretty accurate and that in general it works pretty well - especially for a 1920's era camera - around 90 years old now. The lens (a non-standard CZJ Triotar 150mm f/4.5 - if anyone could let me know what lens mount this is that would be great, I'm trying to find a slightly wider lens) is fantastically sharp even wide open - but herein lies my problem. The camera seems to consistently focus an inch or two behind my subject, getting worse the further away from the camera the subject is.
Now, logically, I believe I can simply raise or lower the focusing screen to compensate for this, yes? Raising it would be easy peasy - it's simply held in with two metal clips and lifts straight out. Lowering it would be much harder. I'm shattered after a night out last night and I can't work out which way it'd need to go though. Any help would be appreciated.
For those of you that are interested in the camera, here's a link:
http://www.earlyphotography.co.uk/site/entry_C40.html
Some shots from my first few rolls of film. Bear in mind that all of these were shot wide open. I understand that I could simply stop down to f/8 or smaller and enjoy insanely sharp images with no focusing issues, but one of the wonders of using a larger format on a camera like this is the DOF:
(Yes, I know the negs are filthy, I'm sorry)
On a side note, I also found some b/w film in the garage. Ilford HP5, around 8 rolls of it. The only downside is that it expired in 1986. I thought screw it and went with it anyway. I pushed the dev time from 5min to 8min and they didn't come out too badly - the shadows are pretty messy, and the backing paper has somehow burnt itself onto the film. I'm going to try shooting with it at iso200 next time to give the film time to thicken up a little:
Now, logically, I believe I can simply raise or lower the focusing screen to compensate for this, yes? Raising it would be easy peasy - it's simply held in with two metal clips and lifts straight out. Lowering it would be much harder. I'm shattered after a night out last night and I can't work out which way it'd need to go though. Any help would be appreciated.
For those of you that are interested in the camera, here's a link:
http://www.earlyphotography.co.uk/site/entry_C40.html
Some shots from my first few rolls of film. Bear in mind that all of these were shot wide open. I understand that I could simply stop down to f/8 or smaller and enjoy insanely sharp images with no focusing issues, but one of the wonders of using a larger format on a camera like this is the DOF:
(Yes, I know the negs are filthy, I'm sorry)
On a side note, I also found some b/w film in the garage. Ilford HP5, around 8 rolls of it. The only downside is that it expired in 1986. I thought screw it and went with it anyway. I pushed the dev time from 5min to 8min and they didn't come out too badly - the shadows are pretty messy, and the backing paper has somehow burnt itself onto the film. I'm going to try shooting with it at iso200 next time to give the film time to thicken up a little: