First roll of 120 that I shot with the Pentax 6x7 came back from the lab and unfortunately they're all blurry. Hubris. I thought I could do it handheld. Should've tried a tripod at least for one shot.
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Eugen Rochko (gargron@mastodon.social)'s status on Thursday, 07-Dec-2023 22:53:48 JST Eugen Rochko -
Eugen Rochko (gargron@mastodon.social)'s status on Thursday, 07-Dec-2023 22:57:55 JST Eugen Rochko @gideonstar No thank you.
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Stefan Ritter :verified: (gideonstar@mastodon.gideonstar.de)'s status on Thursday, 07-Dec-2023 22:57:56 JST Stefan Ritter :verified: @Gargron I'm sure there is an AI somewhere to fix that.
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Tony (coldkennels@mastodon.social)'s status on Thursday, 07-Dec-2023 23:08:04 JST Tony @Gargron Those things are giant tanks; I can't say I'm surprised. I used a Pentacon Six TL for a while and that had the same "problem". A lot of big moving parts on those MF SLRs!
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Conny G. wa (conny_g_wa@mastodon.social)'s status on Friday, 08-Dec-2023 00:23:23 JST Conny G. wa @Gargron Since the Pentax 6x7 offers exposure times of up to 1/1000s, hand-held shots should be quite possible - provided it is bright enough. Films with ISO 400 are recommended - which can also be used at 800 ISO with push development. I prefer to use slide films with my Zenza Bronica S2a 6x6 camera, despite the fact that they are more critical when exposing. And you?
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Colin Devroe (cdevroe@mastodon.social)'s status on Friday, 08-Dec-2023 12:42:12 JST Colin Devroe @Gargron anything lower than 1/60 I cannot do my hand. That’s my rule for me.
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