FotohuisR
Member
Cheap and after some maintenance good working: Zorki-6 with some LTM lenses J-8, J-12, J-9. I have two Zorki-6 bodies. They are about the same age which I am.
As a side note, my cousin in Canada recently emailed her response to a query I made two years ago. It seems the family's 616 Kodak Box Brownie my stepdad bought in 1943, is now in the hands of my sister-in-law, my stepbrother's widow. She has no use for it but refuses to part with it. This gal made it her life's goal to get our family's entire estate, but my stepmom lived to 102 and when she passed in 2021 there was nothing left.
I did get almost all of the family's original 616 negatives when I was in Canada in 1982, so in that way I'm the one best off.
How about this post from more than a decade ago? Leicas, heartbreak, funerals and buried M4s: How did you get into Leicas?....
The story I've heard (second-handedly) from one of the attendees was, as the casket was lowered into the ground, his partner put a Leica M3 on top of the box ,which then descended into the ground, and was most likely buried.
If the tale is true, it meant the loss of a fine Leica.
How about this post from more than a decade ago? Leicas, heartbreak, funerals and buried M4s: How did you get into Leicas?
Dear Shadams,Fujifilm X100F. 9 years now, if I don't count all the previous X100 models. So, 15 years. But nine for the "F" model and going strong. The Asahi Pentax Spotmatic F that started this is still in the gear cabinet. - that dates back to '68. It works but I haven't shot that since the '80s. No, the X100f should outlast me.
People like that can be so infuriating! Make sure your will specifies she is to get nothing because she is a vituperative harpy, just to be on the safe side.
How about this post from more than a decade ago? Leicas, heartbreak, funerals and buried M4s: How did you get into Leicas?
Better to pass it along. Besides, assuming all goes well for you, the 1000 max shutter speed will be useless in all that Light on the Other Side.I thought about being buried with my M2, only for a second or two.
Thanks, Tim. Indeed, that kit went through the hard bits of SEA before it got to me. They're great picture making machines but I'm a colorist. Sort of. Mostly. Kinda. And, (sigh) well, Kodachrome, right? I'll be honest and say that about once a year I take out the Speed Graphic and remind myself of why I always felt that film was to be tolerated. Don't misunderstand, I love working a print - for about a day - and my own impatience reminds me of where my craft really lies. Or my ineptitude. If I'm shooting film, it's gonna have to be B&W and it's gonna have to be big. These are all just excuses, I suppose. Excuses for a boomer that embraced the digital evolution early after thirty years of film.Dear Shadams,
Get that Spotmatic F out and give it a go! I bought one a couple of years ago for $ 18.00 from Shopgoodwill with a 55mm f1.8 SMC Takumar and clean case. It works perfectly and really did rekindle my interest in film photography. The best thing is that if the light meter works it will work forever with alkaline 625 batteries because the camera has an internal voltage regulator.
Have at it!
Regards,
Tim Murphy
Harrisburg PA 🙂
This thread is about cameras FOR life. Not AFTER life.
I don't understand the strong emotions about an old Kodak box camera: It's common and inexpensive even now, and I imagine if folks today regard it at all, it's as a keepsake or display piece.
Until the '90s the concept of owning one camera and a 50mm lens was the norm. Most of us had only the one lens, and we did everything with it. I was in my late 20s when I finally coughed up enough spare cash to buy additional glass, in my case two Hanimexes, a '35 and a '135 for a kit I took with me on a six-months tour of the Pacific and Asia. Somewhere along the way I acquired a zoomie, IRRC an Elicar 70-210 with glass I soon came to suspect was made from soft drink bottles. Used at f/11 it produced a few passably good Kodachrome slides, several of which I sold to stock photo markets.
it will be like finding long lost treasure.
