I've just started playing around with my instax wide back and hadn't seen anyone using them with a rangefinder yet.
I'm using a Crown Graphic with a top range-finder and it's corresponding 135 4.7 lens. I spaced back the lens from the infinity stop by the same thickness as the ground glass spacer. The spacer is awkward to use so I 3D printed a block that is the right thickness and fits better. I also 3D printed a mark for the viewfinder using the position of the gg spacer opening and scaling it down, but I think you could do a reasonably good job just using some tape.
Test pics show that it focuses just fine with this setup! Shot 2 test pics at ~50 feet and ~8 feet and both are in focus. I'm using the sunny 16 rule and exposed at is 400, f16 @1/500th for sunny conditions. Shots are handheld and 'scanned' with an old iphone, so I'm sure I'm leaving a lot of sharpness on the table.
One item to note is that if you eject an instax with the back mounted, it ejects right in line with the eyepiece and ends up severely bending the picture on my setup. I'm removing the back to eject right now, but I may try 3D printing a guide to see if that helps.
Has anyone else tried this yet? I'm pretty impressed with how detailed the images came out and looking forward to shooting more!
I'm using a Crown Graphic with a top range-finder and it's corresponding 135 4.7 lens. I spaced back the lens from the infinity stop by the same thickness as the ground glass spacer. The spacer is awkward to use so I 3D printed a block that is the right thickness and fits better. I also 3D printed a mark for the viewfinder using the position of the gg spacer opening and scaling it down, but I think you could do a reasonably good job just using some tape.
Test pics show that it focuses just fine with this setup! Shot 2 test pics at ~50 feet and ~8 feet and both are in focus. I'm using the sunny 16 rule and exposed at is 400, f16 @1/500th for sunny conditions. Shots are handheld and 'scanned' with an old iphone, so I'm sure I'm leaving a lot of sharpness on the table.
One item to note is that if you eject an instax with the back mounted, it ejects right in line with the eyepiece and ends up severely bending the picture on my setup. I'm removing the back to eject right now, but I may try 3D printing a guide to see if that helps.
Has anyone else tried this yet? I'm pretty impressed with how detailed the images came out and looking forward to shooting more!
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