bmattock
Veteran
The Canon FX was a 35mm SLR with an external meter, made in 1964. Mine was purchased from a pawn shop in the mid to late 1970s by my father so I could take a photography course in high school. Originally all I had was a 50mm f/1.8 lens for it, but I've since expanded that to include the ultra-fast f/1.2 55mm and 58mm, the 85mm f/1.8, the 135mm f/2.5, and so on. However, I shot this roll with the Canon FL 50mm f/1.4 Model II, a nice contrasty lens that is plenty sharp enough for me. The camera once had a capping problem with the shutter, but that's been fixed by an overhaul a few years back. I tend to ignore the meter and use an external Sekonic L-358 instead.

2016-02-20 13.02.22 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Konica-2016-02-20-0029_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr
I shot these photos at Metamora-Hadley State Park in Michigan. I was carrying a Konica I fixed-lens rangefinder and this Canon FX. I used them to take pictures of each other; that's one good way to avoid mixing up the film later!
Speaking of film, I used expired Shantou ERA 100 B&W film rated at EI 200, developed in Diafine as usual.

Canon-2016-02-20-0007_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr
Canon-2016-02-20-0008_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr
It was a fairly bright day out, so most shots (except for the show-off-y bokeh-licious shots above) were taken between 1/125 and 1/500 and between f/8 and f/16.

Canon-2016-02-20-0010_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Canon-2016-02-20-0014_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Canon-2016-02-20-0016_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Canon-2016-02-20-0024_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Canon-2016-02-20-0025_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Canon-2016-02-20-0026_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Canon-2016-02-20-0028_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Canon-2016-02-20-0031_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr
Hope you enjoyed my little exposition!

2016-02-20 13.02.22 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Konica-2016-02-20-0029_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr
I shot these photos at Metamora-Hadley State Park in Michigan. I was carrying a Konica I fixed-lens rangefinder and this Canon FX. I used them to take pictures of each other; that's one good way to avoid mixing up the film later!
Speaking of film, I used expired Shantou ERA 100 B&W film rated at EI 200, developed in Diafine as usual.

Canon-2016-02-20-0007_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

It was a fairly bright day out, so most shots (except for the show-off-y bokeh-licious shots above) were taken between 1/125 and 1/500 and between f/8 and f/16.

Canon-2016-02-20-0010_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Canon-2016-02-20-0014_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Canon-2016-02-20-0016_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Canon-2016-02-20-0024_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Canon-2016-02-20-0025_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Canon-2016-02-20-0026_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Canon-2016-02-20-0028_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr

Canon-2016-02-20-0031_v1 by Wigwam Jones, on Flickr
Hope you enjoyed my little exposition!
I have an FX. Meter works, the only problem is the mirror doesn't always return properly and slow speeds are off. It's a well-built camera with a big, bright viewfinder a very good focusing screen. Always was fond of the breech lock.
farlymac
PF McFarland
I never got an FX, but the lenses I did get for the FT are really nice, as you found out, Bill. Great looking photos, with plenty of sharpness.
PF
PF
SteveM
Established
Those photos show how great the early FL lenses are. My first SLR was a Canon TL, introduced a few years after the FX. It had a 50mm f1.8 FL lens, and I remember the incredibly sharp images it gave. The later F series cameras had the partial spot meter area, which I still prefer to the center-weight average pattern of the Nikons that I currently use. Still think about an F1 occasionally….
Steve
Steve
Nokton48
Veteran
I bought FL lenses just to use them on my Canon rangefinders, when I had them. Those old FL lenses are really great and Man are they well made!
Mackinaw
Think Different
I still have an old Canon FP which I bought many years back. Basically, a Canon FX without a meter. Love the camera’s simplicity. It also has one of the silkiest film advance motions of any camera I have. Like a hot knife through butter. Needs a CLA though, the shutter is capping.
Jim B.
Jim B.
bmattock
Veteran
I still have an old Canon FP which I bought many years back. Basically, a Canon FX without a meter. Love the camera’s simplicity. It also has one of the silkiest film advance motions of any camera I have. Like a hot knife through butter. Needs a CLA though, the shutter is capping.
Jim B.
It seems like they all do that eventually. Also, the prism often desilvers. I don't like buying them on eBay because often sellers do not know what 'desilvering' of the prism looks like; they think it's just dirt in the viewfinder; but it cannot be cleaned off. If a prism has desilvering, it's done for.
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