Originally Posted by
Manfred M
Brian there are two different factors at play in your response and one of them is clearly ones own development as a photographer. The other is the advances in technology; which results in what is effectively more talented and versatile equipment at a more cost effective price point.
I got my first camera when I was 7 or 8 years old. My second one arrived by the time I was 12 and my first SLR I got when I was 17. In high school I had access to lenses that were compatible with the camera I bought that had focal lengths from 24mm to 300mm. I had access to a full B&W and colour darkroom. I shot people (portraits), events, landscapes, street photography. I dabbled in macro and IR. I ended up building my own home B&W and colour darkroom.
Burning, dodging, controlling contrast, exposure, correcting perspective distortion were things I was doing in my mid to late teens. I was a better B&W photographer than I am now, just because I did so much of it. I have lenses for my film cameras that run from 19mm to 400mm (I've had all of them for close to 40 years); with my FF DSLR I own lenses that go from 14mm to 500mm; not all that much different than what I have been shooting since the early 1980s.
So I see no real learning curve issues in moving to a medium format camera; any more so than I found from going from a crop frame camera to a full frame one. Even in high school, I was printing at 16" x 20" size prints; my current printer is maxed out at 17" x 22". Going to a 24" printer or even a 44" printer would not be a stretch (especially with a the resolution a medium format camera offers). The FujiFilm and Hasselblad cameras are about the same size as my full-frame camera; the Pentax is definitely larger.
So for the type of photography I do, the transition would be easy. I haul my gear to pretty remote places all over the world, so that would not change either.