OurManInTangier said:
Ok so I've heard grand things about these Yashica Electro cameras. I also remember seeing some very striking images taken with one but what is IT that makes these cameras so popular?
I don't remember much about the images I saw but it was as if there was an innate quality of the lens or something that gave the images their own...I don't know, aura???
I'm tempted to pick one up, as they seem so cheap, and play around with it for some of my colour stuff. Can anyone give me any idea of;
1. What makes them so good?
2. The best film to use with them, preferably colour
3. Any tricks to get the best out of them or whether they're brilliant wide open etc etc etc
Thanks
They're basically free, pays to spring an extra $10-20 to get one that's been serviced, imo, rather than take a chance...
Here's my "take"... I shoot mainly with a 50, favorite focal length, so a 45mm fixed lens doesn't bother me one bit. The 1.7 Yashinon is a great lens, fast, sharp nice signature - subjective. My take again - it's pretty hard to mess up a fast 50. Any marquee camera co - German or Japanese, had this down by the 60's/70's and wasn't going to put out a crappy one. It takes as good a pic as any rangefinder but you're not paying for any "name" cachet, coolness factor, they were such great cameras and such great values they sold by the boatload without much design change so they're cheap, cheap, cheap on the used market. "Classics" - the Leicas, Nikon "S"'s, Canon "P"'s are great cameras but overvalued because they're also collectibles. Electros are also great cameras but undervalued - manufactured, I believe, into the millions. The viewfinder - if clean, is perfectly usable even in low light. Tough it's not as bright as a Leica, the difference in cost based on such a luxury isn't nearly worth the cost differential. Usable = usable.
1. What makes them so good?
Very fast to use. Pre-meter using top plate over/under light, pre-focus with scale, refine focus in viewfinder - fire. Silent shutter, can meter in low light and keep its stepless shutter open up to 30 secs, almost spooky accurate meter, and more sensitive, for its era. Aperture priortiy for precise control over DOF, others shutter priority. Ability to use fill flash, synchs at all speeds. Parrallax corrected viewfinder. Film rating up to 1000, others 800 or 400. Excellent fast glass. ... all from $0 to $60 (serviced). That don't buy a Leica lens cap.
2. Best Film
Your favorite. I'm partial to Kodak UC 400 for color, and BW "faves" too numerous to mention.
3. Tricks...
Don't let the lack of shutter speed or lack of cachet bug you. Just shoot. It's built for speed and I'll go out on a limb and say it takes pics as good as anything else commanding higher dollar values there.
I sometimes ask myself, why not break down and get a Leica or a Nikon S or a this or a that... Then I come to my senses and realize the differences in quality are negligible. If I really am going for the highest quality I don't with shoot small format camera. Most of the alleged quality differences between a no-cachet humble "GSN" and a muy cachet (fill in the blank) are in the mind of the user.