Switch to English Language Passer en langue française Omschakelen naar Nederlandse Taal Wechseln Sie zu deutschen Sprache Passa alla lingua italiana
Members: 57,953   Posts: 1,195,001   Online: 902
      
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 17
  1. #1

    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Posts
    5,032
    Images
    9

    eyesight going bad

    Guess I am officially getting old. In the last year my closeup eyesight sucks. I am having to lift my glasses up to see the close focusing on the ground glass.

    For those of you elderly types does this mess with focus? I don't think so but thought I would check.

    Told the wife that since my eyes were getting bad looking at a small 8x10 GG I needed a bigger camera. She told me to go get granny glasses at walmart.

    Worth a try.
    Technological society has succeeded in multiplying the opportunities for pleasure, but it has great difficulty in generating joy. Pope Paul VI

    So, I think the "greats" were true to their visions, once their visions no longer sucked. Ralph Barker 12/2004

  2. #2
    papagene's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Western Mass., USA
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    4,945
    Images
    97
    I use a pair of "Cheaters" (granny glasses) for rough focusing and composition on my 4x5 & 5x7 and in the darkroom. It is better than lifting my regular glasses up or craning my neck to see the GG.
    gene LaFord


    Long live Ed "Big Daddy" Roth!!
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------
    "I don't care about Milwaukee or Chicago." - Yvon LeBlanc

  3. #3
    jp80874's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    Bath, OH 44210 USA
    Shooter
    ULarge Format
    Posts
    2,796
    Images
    6
    Mark,

    I’m 71, have been wearing glasses since second grade, wear tri focals now. I use my glasses for rough focus and composition and then fine tune with a Toyo 3.something loupe. Moving up from 4x5 to 8x10 was like turning on a bright TV set. Just between us though, for me 7x17 is not any brighter than 8x10. I have fantasies about a 12x20, but realistically I think I would have trouble setting it up after getting it to the site in the baby jogger I use now. Use the best tools you can and keep on making pictures.

    John Powers
    "If you want to be famous, you must do something more badly than anybody in the entire world." Miroslav Tichý

  4. #4
    Sirius Glass's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Southern California & Virginia
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    10,212
    I usually wear contact lenses when I do photography although I can use either progressive or lined bifocals or trifocals. With the contacts I do not need reading glasses unless the light is dim and I have to read fine print.

    However to get a sharp focus on ground glass some times I use a 4.75 reading glasses instead of 1.75 and a loupe.

    Steve
    Warning!! Handling a Hasselblad can be harmful to your financial well being!

    Nothing beats a great piece of glass!

    I leave the digital work for the urologists and proctologists.

  5. #5
    Bruce Osgood's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2002
    Location
    Brooklyn, N.Y. USA
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    2,228
    Images
    28
    At 72 I'm about ready to toss away my progressive lenses because for TV and longer they don't do it anymore. For computer time they are OK but for ground glass viewing/focusing they are worthless.

    I am wondering if the loupe in place of glasses might be more effective than granny glasses? I think you need to be careful in selecting a loupe because the magnification can be so strong as to magnify the grain of the glass and miss the image. I don't know what a proper strength would be.

  6. #6

    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Monroe, WA, USA
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    1,156
    Images
    10
    Quote Originally Posted by Sirius Glass View Post
    However to get a sharp focus on ground glass some times I use a 4.75 reading glasses instead of 1.75 and a loupe.
    Similar here, except I use 6.00x magnifying glasses intended for the vision-impaired. The glasses themselves are dog-butt ugly, but the binocular-viewing and hands-free factors are excellent while under the darkcloth. And if they accidently fall off a cliff they only cost a small amount to replace. I keep several pair handy, including in the darkroom for lightbox work.

    Ken
    "In 1850 it would have been unusual to find someone who had handled a camera or looked at a photograph, but 100 years later the reverse would have been true—the camera had become a ubiquitous device, its techniques manageable by even the clumsiest and least sophisticated person."

    – Naomi Rosenblum, A World History of Photography, 1984

  7. #7
    Sirius Glass's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Southern California & Virginia
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    10,212
    If I could find a +6, I would buy it. The reason I have the 4.75 is that it was the strongest set of three glasses that Costco had for $19US. Actually it was the strongest reading glasses that they had.
    Warning!! Handling a Hasselblad can be harmful to your financial well being!

    Nothing beats a great piece of glass!

    I leave the digital work for the urologists and proctologists.

  8. #8
    ann
    ann is offline

    Join Date
    Sep 2002
    Shooter
    35mm
    Posts
    2,642
    Images
    26
    I must have tried at least 6 different loupes when i went through this issue.

    I found that general focus with my glasses would do, but then would use the loupe for fine tuning
    http://www.aclancyphotography.com

  9. #9

    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Posts
    5,032
    Images
    9
    Great. I have the eyesight of a 70 year old. I'm only 40!!!

    Guess I am in the market for some granny glasses to focus. Somewhere Around the house I have a Satin Snow Ground glass I never got around to putting in the 8x10.

    I flip my glasses above my eyes and I don't need a loupe. I can focus on really minute details. I just hate lifting my glasses up to use my own built in magnifier.
    Technological society has succeeded in multiplying the opportunities for pleasure, but it has great difficulty in generating joy. Pope Paul VI

    So, I think the "greats" were true to their visions, once their visions no longer sucked. Ralph Barker 12/2004

  10. #10

    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    florida
    Shooter
    Medium Format
    Posts
    819
    Images
    1
    I compose and do initial focusing with my reading Rx but fine focus with a Horseman 4x loupe and no glasses. I find that using the loupe "forces" me to check the focus isolating different areas on the ground glass and is helpful to confirm the effect of any camera movements that were made. That system works for me. For medium format I have a corrected eyepiece which beats using the glasses.

    http://www.jeffreyglasser.com/

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast


 

APUG PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR INFRASTRUCTURE:


 
                     

Contact Us  |  Support Us!  |  Advertise  |  Site Terms  |  Archive  —   Search  |  Mobile Device Access  |  RSS  |  Facebook  |  Linkedin