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p.2 #7 · Landscapes With Mamiya 7II | |
There are two problems with the Mamiya 7 as a landscape camera. First is the rangefinder focusing and all that goes with it, second is the min. focus distance is about 3' making near/far compositions very difficult. If you can live with those two problems, I think it has the highest image quality per pound ratio of any camera in existence. I came very close to buying one recently but ultimately decided I needed to build up my digital kit first as the M7 has all the combined limitations of medium format, film, and rangefinder.
I owned a Fuji GSW690III for a while and that is a great camera if you like the focal length (about 28mm in 35mm equivalent). It is significantly bigger than the Mamiya, a little bulky and clunky, and the rangefinder is very small. Photographing at near sunset I had to frame the composition by eye and then try to match it up in the rangefinder using landmarks, which isn't a problem with the Mamiya. I don't think that there is a big difference in image quality either as the Mamiya lenses are sharper, but the Fuji definitely has an advantage if you are cropping into a panoramic.
For your needs, I do think 4x5 may be a better way to go, though the film costs are much higher. The Mamiya 7 is capable of exceptional images, but 4x5 has a different look and landscape photos, whether viewed on a light table or a high quality scan from West Coast Imaging, feel like you can just step right into the image. Velvia on 4x5 has no equal. When people compare DLSRs to MF or MF digital to 4x5, they are usually looking at 100% crops and digital will win every time. But if you look at a print, especially a large landscape print, drum scanned 4x5 Velvia just feels right in a way that is hard to explain.
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