William Robb writes:

> I don't know who you were quoting Mike, but the person being
> quoted is wrong (my opinion only). 6x6 is a different format
> from 6x4.5, with different shooting requirements.
> If you shoot 6x6, and make rectangular prints, you have chosen
> the wrong format to shoot with.
> I know a couple of people with Hasselblads who have taken the
> time to learn how to use the square format to it's best
> advantage, and they make beautiful large, square prints.

I think you are right on target here.  I've observed that from my own
experiences.  I used to have a 6x6 MF camera before I started using
35mm gear.  I happened to stumble across my MF negatives last fall.

When I look at them I see photography that is quite different from
the photos which I make in the rectangular 35mm format.   There is
framing and composition in the square format which I _just wouldn't
try_ in 35mm.  I would do something else instead.   That "something
else" is often incompatible with a resulting square crop, or would not
contain the right elements to make into a good square photo later.

I just don't know how to say it well, but the framing and composition
comes out _different_ in the square format.  Not better, different.
Sometimes I think the square composition is better than any composition
I would have done with a rectangular 35mm camera.   Other times a 35mm
wide composition may have been better ... however cropping with MF isn't
as bad as 35mm cropping.

Going through my 6x6 negatives was one reason that I started to push
hard for MF gear again, instead of just thinking about it in abstract
terms and holding off purchasing it.   As I've mentiond earlier, I
was looking to get a 6x6 body.   I noticed the Pentax 6x7 due to the
mystical brotherhood, and discovered the affordability of the components.
6x7 is not _that_ different from 6x6, unlike the much wider 35mm.  If
I really want to shoot square format with the 6x7 I don't really loose
all that much; I could always insert some framing material between
the finder and the body to aid square framing.   The only downside
is that you still get 10 shots per roll. :)

Bolo -- Josef T. Burger
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