Re: Favorite sleepers
rsilfverberg said:
* Olympus SC
Wonderful, amazing G.Zuiko (7 elements in 5 groups) 42/1.8 lens (!!!), Cds meter and coupled rangefinder. Released 1963. (Not to be confused with the 35-S from the 1950's).
*Kodak Medalist II
Built like a tank this 6x9 camera can be converted to take regular 120 film. Great lens.
I knew about the Medalist II, although I have never owned one. Instead, I have a Fujica G690, the interchangeable lens earlier version of the later fixed-lens models. I have a 100mm and 180mm lens, but right now, the camera is a bit sick. However, the lens is the absolute sharpest I have ever owned, bar none. You only get 8 shots on a 120 roll, but 6x9 on Kodak Portra 400UC makes the NICEST portraits you'll ever see. And you could make billboards out of 'em.
I did not know about the Olympus SC, I'll have to keep a lookout for it. I'm still looking for an EC, having obtained an RD (fantastic) and an SP (not sure I like it).
My personal sleeper favorites right now:
* Ricoh Five-One-Nine. A real oddball, but very sharp lens, a joy to work with, and the trigger winder on the bottom is fun to use. Also very, quiet.
* Agfa Karat IV. This is the one that uses regular 35mm film, not a strange proprietary cassette. Get it with the Xenon 2.0 or the Soligon 2.0 (it also came with a Xenar 2.8 or a Solinar 2.8). The quality of construction is amazing, the camera is small but solid, the shutter is dead quiet. The Karat 36 is similar in quality, but it has a split-image viewfinder that I find hard to use.
* Fujica 35-ML. Hard to find, and the shutter is often non-functioning when you find it. But it has an amazing viewfinder, a focus knob on the back that is cool to play with, and it is also very small and quiet.
* Zeiss Ikon Contina IIa. Really, really, under-rated. Not a true rangefinder, you have to use an external rangefinder or guestimate. The lens is a Novar-Anastigmat 45mm 3.5, so not very fast. But the quality of the construction of this camera will make you weep. It feels so good in the hand, it's like it was made just for you. Probably not the best picture-taker, but there are times when it matters less the sharpness and more the great feel of using a fine machine.
* Aires IIIL. Another well-made machine, though probably not up to the standard of those I've mentioned above. Many have sticky shutters that have to be exercised.
* Olympus 35-S II. As you mentioned it above, I thought I'd add that I do have one of these beauties, and I love it. Mechanical work of art. I'm not knocking the lens quality of the 70's models, but you have to admit, the construction left a bit to be desired. The finest quality construction pretty much ended for fixed-lens rangefinders in the late 1950's or early 60's. Mine has the G Zuiko 45mm f 1.8. Pretty sweet, you've seen some of the photos I've taken with it.
* Many have spoken about the wonders of the Yashica Electro 35 GSN, et al. Yet it continues to sell for five bucks on eBay. Reasons? Well, you have to buy a funky battery adapter or make one yourself, because it used a very strange mercury battery that is unobtainable even overseas, and it has and electric shutter, so it only has one speed (1/500) if it has no battery in it. Also, you can't set the shutter speed at all, it is infinitely variable between 30 seconds and 1/500 based on the meter reading, so the meter and battery both have to be working. But get one that works, and it blows the much-vaunted Canonet (I have 3 of them and like them, this is not a slam) right out of the water. The lens is awe-inspiring. I'm sorry, I'm a Canon guy, but I'd much rather have my Electro GSN (the one that works, I have 3 others that don't). And there are lots of fun variations on the Electro to collect. I now have the grand-poobah (in my humble opinion) of Electros, the 35 CC. It rocks.
If I could only have ONE of the above cameras right now, I'd probably grab the Ricoh Five One Nine. It's just a very nice camera with a laser-sharp lens.
However, my current favorite 35mm fixed-lens rangefinder right now is one of the 'cult classics', the Olympus 35 RD. Yep, that one does it all for me. That Minolta Hi-Matic 9 is pretty sweet too, though. Hmmm.
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks