richard_l
Well-known
Although the Rollei 35 is not strictly a rangefinder, are images taken with this camera appropriate for the RFF Gallery?
Richard
Richard
I hope so 🙂.richard_l said:Although the Rollei 35 is not strictly a rangefinder, are images taken with this camera appropriate for the RFF Gallery?
Richard
I think the Singapore made Tessars are marked "Made by Rollei." The German made Tessars were generally used on the Rollei 35 until Rollei started producing the Tessars, and they changed the camera name to Rollei 35T. There is some history at http://www.rolleiclub.com/rollei/35/35_singapore.htmFrankS said:Richard, how can you tell whether the Tessar lens used on a Singapore-made Rollei was made in Germany or not? Serial number? Do you that range of numbers? Or does it simply say somewhere: lens made in Germany?
Wow.. and I always thought the problem was that the shoe's on the underside.. 😛Sonnar2 said:Voigtlander, Medis and other made precise external rangefinders in the 50's which can be handheld, or attach to the shoe if you like and are quite cheap. The problem with Rollei 35 is that their distance scale isn't very precise either to transfer measurings like "4.8m"
richard_l said:I suppose you could say that guessing distance uses a type of optical rangefinder: two eyes and a brain. (The rangefinder base is the distance between the eyes.)
Chris,ChrisPlatt said:This little camera has always fascinated me; I once owned one briefly.
The image quality was excellent, but the camera was a real PITA to use.
IMO all the controls are too close together and/or in the wrong place.
I really believe the anti-ergonomic design is part of the appeal for some...
Excelsior, you fathead!
-Chris-
Just in case:Gordon Coale said:I used one for years until it got dropped and the rear lens element fell out. Great camera and great pictures. Scale focus and I don't recall ever having an out of focus picture. I used it a lot with a Vivitar 283 for fill flash. I really should get it repaired. Some day.