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- NIKON F6 G LENS COMPATIBILITY MANUAL
- NIKON F6 G LENS COMPATIBILITY PRO
- NIKON F6 G LENS COMPATIBILITY PROFESSIONAL
NIKON F6 G LENS COMPATIBILITY MANUAL
If auto / aperture or shutter priority is your cup of tea, the F100 has a metering system accurate enough to shoot just about any film (black and white / slide film have less tolerance for botched exposure than C41 color negative).įor more advanced photographers, or those with a little more time between shots, shooting the camera on full manual with a light meter produces beautiful, consistent images.
NIKON F6 G LENS COMPATIBILITY PRO
Several of my wedding photographer friends carry an F100 with a 50mm on full auto as a film body for capturing alternative versions of images with some Delta 3200.* * Bonus pro tip: Shooting Delta 3200 at 1600 and developing normally gives a beautiful, romantic look. Loading is effortless (as seen below), you can take as much or as little control over the camera as you like. You'll be hard pressed to find an easier camera to use, film or otherwise. My 85 f/1.4G stays virtually glued to this camera. It also comes equipped with a surprisingly robust auto- focus system (with five points) that is capable of accurately focusing in low light conditions and with wide-open lenses. Perhaps the most important feature that sets aside the F100 is its complete compatibility with modern Nikon glass including G lenses that do not have a physical aperture control. You can effort adjust settings by spinning the dials on the grip, if back button focus is your jam that's totally an option, it's easy to switch between AF-S, AF-C, and MF with the front toggle, and the camera supports the standard PASM mode settings found on Nikon pro bodies. The controls are almost the exact same as Nikon's modern DSLR offerings and are an easy transition from Canon's. Made almost entirely out of magnesium (with the exception of the back film cover) the F100 actually, and this might get me into trouble, feels a little better built than my D800.ĭigital shooters will immediately feel at home with the F100 when transitioning from their Nikon or Canon kit. The body itself is extremely well built and feels sturdy in the hands. The F100 was, at the time, one of the best featured cameras ever made and still remains the 135 camera of choice for film enthusiasts, wedding photographers, and many fine artists.
NIKON F6 G LENS COMPATIBILITY PROFESSIONAL
Produced in 1999, the F100 was Nikon's state-of-the-art prosumer / high end 35mm camera, falling just under the professional F5. While there are some very similar models to the F100 from Nikon, Canon, Contax, and Minolta some of which are arguably better (in the case of the Canon EOS 1V and Nikon F6) as far as feature set and bang-for-the-buck goes it's hard to best the F100. The Nikon F100 is, without a doubt, one of the best 135 cameras out there and is, in my opinion, is the absolute best choice for a digital shooter to experiment with 35mm film.* Everything from cheap drug-store point and shoots to beautiful, bespoke-feeling Leicas, to the Canon AE-1 hipsters wear around their necks with a guitar strap. There are hundreds of 35mm film camera options out there.