Godfrey
somewhat colored
About a dozen years ago, I was meandering by a museum in Palo Alto with a friend. As we walked past the museum, I saw a guy with a big box heading to the dumpster. There were interesting, technical looking things in the box, so I asked him what the stuff was.
"Donations from people, lots of old junk we have no space for," he replied. We took a look, and one of the things in the box was a beat up Voigtländer Vito II, looking much the worse for wear.
"You gonna throw this out?" I asked. "Can I have it?"
"You can have anything in the box, I don't care! Just want to get rid of it. It's not worth anything," he replied.
And so I took home the Vito II and a pretty little Kodak Bantam folder (bakelight construction). And they've been sitting on my bookshelf as display pieces ever since. Now, the Bantam has a working shutter but the standard catch is broken and gone, and who can really bother trying to find 828 film loads any more? But a few months back I was looking at the Vito II and wondered if the shutter worked... It almost did! I would make one rather lethargic exposure and then jam, and after a few minutes of jiggling it and working the shutter speed ring around, it would make another. The lens looked to be fungus free, the bellows (despite a ton of dust) looked sound. Hmm. 'Probably needs a good cleaning...' So I sent it off to the repair shop for a clean and service.
A couple of months later, it has returned with all the externals and internals cleaned, adjusted and lubricated. It needed a new mainspring for the shutter too. (Expensive, a whole $12! LOL!) The shutter works beautifully at all speeds, the little Color-Skopar 50mm f/3.5 lens is clear and ready to be used. I found an instruction manual for it and loaded it with ACROS 100 film just now (appropriate to its 1/300 maximum shutter speed).
I snapped a few photos of it the other day sitting next to my Leica M10-M just for comparison of size and such...
And we're off! Let's see what this little Color-Skopar 50mm can do! 😀
I'll add pictures I make with it to this thread once I finish the roll of film and process/scan it.
G
"Donations from people, lots of old junk we have no space for," he replied. We took a look, and one of the things in the box was a beat up Voigtländer Vito II, looking much the worse for wear.
"You gonna throw this out?" I asked. "Can I have it?"
"You can have anything in the box, I don't care! Just want to get rid of it. It's not worth anything," he replied.
And so I took home the Vito II and a pretty little Kodak Bantam folder (bakelight construction). And they've been sitting on my bookshelf as display pieces ever since. Now, the Bantam has a working shutter but the standard catch is broken and gone, and who can really bother trying to find 828 film loads any more? But a few months back I was looking at the Vito II and wondered if the shutter worked... It almost did! I would make one rather lethargic exposure and then jam, and after a few minutes of jiggling it and working the shutter speed ring around, it would make another. The lens looked to be fungus free, the bellows (despite a ton of dust) looked sound. Hmm. 'Probably needs a good cleaning...' So I sent it off to the repair shop for a clean and service.
A couple of months later, it has returned with all the externals and internals cleaned, adjusted and lubricated. It needed a new mainspring for the shutter too. (Expensive, a whole $12! LOL!) The shutter works beautifully at all speeds, the little Color-Skopar 50mm f/3.5 lens is clear and ready to be used. I found an instruction manual for it and loaded it with ACROS 100 film just now (appropriate to its 1/300 maximum shutter speed).
I snapped a few photos of it the other day sitting next to my Leica M10-M just for comparison of size and such...
And we're off! Let's see what this little Color-Skopar 50mm can do! 😀
I'll add pictures I make with it to this thread once I finish the roll of film and process/scan it.
G