Daily Archives: December 18, 2014

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{Something Borrowed} Zenza Bronica S

I should have thought to title a series “Something Borrowed” a long time ago. I’ve borrowed some very fine medium format cameras over the past handful of years. A Hasselblad, a Contax 645, another Hasselbladand now a Zenza Bronica S.

The Bronica S came to me via Susan, whom you’ve seen featured on this blog before because I photographed her wedding in 2013. She is a fellow film photography enthusiast who has amassed her own little collection of film cameras. Susan knew that I was trying to stave off the desire to buy a medium format SLR and offered to loan me this beauty!

A little about the Bronica S

  • The Bronica S is a medium format 6×6 SLR
  • You can use interchangeable film backs
  • Focusing helical built into the camera body, which is some technical info that I don’t quite understand. But it makes the part of the lens which is outside the camera quite short
  • Its focus and film advance are combined in one knob (with a film advance crank that folds into the knob when not in use)
  • Mirror lock up available, by using a switch on the bottom of the camera
  • A shutter speed range of  1s-1/1000ths
  • Dark slide which cannot remain inserted while film back is attached to the camera. This is the first time I’ve encountered such a dark slide. It slides itself out as a way of reminding you to remove it. Pushing it all the way in is how you remove the film back.
  • Instant return mirror (unlike other medium format cameras such as the Hasselblad or Bronica ETRS cameras)
  • The brightest waist level finder I’ve ever seen!

Focus knob/film advance crank

Bright, bright, BRIGHT waist level finder

It’s like a chromed out car from the 1950s! And it is soooooo heavy. With the standard 75mm lens, it weighs about 4 pounds (1.8 kilograms.) By the way, I love the 75mm Nikkor lens! Partly because it focuses so much more closely than the standard lens on a Hasselblad. You’ll see that I leaned on that close focusing range quite a lot for my test rolls.

That lovely Nikkor-P lens

As I said, the Bronica S’s body’s built-in focusing mechanism means the lens doesn’t protrude far outside the camera. This is at the closest focusing distance, which is the “longest” this lens gets. You can see in an above photo that the lens sits almost flush with the body at its shortest length (focused at infinity.) 

There’s that mirror lock-up switch I told you about

How the camera looks with the waist level finder folded down

 Now. On the the real reason we’re here. The photos this camera can take!

Roll #1 with the Bronica S was my expired Kodak Pro 400MC. I don’t think I did a great job metering for this badly expired film/erred on the side of underexposure when it came to hand-holdable shutter speeds. My bad!

There were so many spiders outside this fall – there were leaves suspended by single threads of web and looked as if they were floating

Totally missed the mark with the exposure here, but I still love this photo of camellia flowers

Blue Corvette at work

Church bus at my dad’s shop

My #basic purchases from Target: Moleskin notebooks, cute stationery, and cute plate

My brother-in-law loves candy corn. At a Halloween party my niece attended, the children played a game where they guessed the number of candies in various jars. My niece won a jar of candy corn by guessing the number closest to the actual pieces in the jar. Coincidence? I think not!

Flameless candle lantern on the mantle

Roll #2 was Ilford HP5+. I hadn’t shot that film in years, and I am kicking myself in hindsight. It is a BEAUTIFUL film and, coupled with the wonderful Bronica S’s lens, I am definitely thrilled with the results of this roll.

Silver tinsel mini Christmas tree and Tower of London snowglobe in my bedroom

 1964 Pontiac Catalina that I photographed at work one day

A wall in my mom’s house. I love her clock!

Pushing depth of field to its limits with close focusing and wide aperture

A bunch of flour fell on my kitchen floor. I dumped it off the porch but some of it landed on the steps. There were leaves on the steps that acted as stencils.

Conclusion?

While I wish I had done a better job nailing the exposure on Roll #1 with the Bronica S, I felt I made up for it with Roll #2. It’s a substantial camera, so it’s not for the faint of heart (or you can build muscle mass by toting it around!) The most important thing on any camera, ultimately, is the quality of the lens. I think the 75mm/2.8 Nikkor-P is GORGEOUS. Now, a word of warning:  I described the sound made by a Hasselblad or Contax 645 as being a “THWACK!” or an authoritative thud. The Bronica S, however, makes a noise that sounds almost as if something catastrophic has just occurred when you press the shutter release. I think that initial “Did I just break this?!” shock at the noise wears off and you don’t notice is so much after you’ve got some experience with the Bronica under your belt. All that to say, you’re not going to be doing any stealthy photography in quiet museums or churches with this camera!

I hope I can put some fresher color film through the camera, and maybe try the 135mm lens that Susan also loaned me for it, before I have to surrender the Bronica back to her 🙂