Rolleiflex TLR on Mount Everest.

Yes very nice! Thanks for the link.

Love this one from the article link to the auction site:
https://auctions.webbs.co.nz/m/lot-...49448?uact=5&aid=283&lid=49447&current_page=0

99287_0.jpg
 
There would have been several cameras taken on the climbing expedition that made it to the top of Everest in the early '50s. Edmund Hillary is known to have used a small Kodak Retina, probably a postwar 1a which had the advantage of being foldable (or collapsible if you prefer) and carried in a pocket.

Correct exposure at those great heights would have been rather a challenge.

As well, the expedition would have had an official photographer. Many years ago at an end of line book sale in Melbourne, I bought a book by an English photographer who claimed the title of official shooter for the Everest summit expedition. Beyond saying this, memory fails me for the moment - the book maybe in one of my 40 cartons of my library still stored in our garage and for the moment is unobtainable...

Somewhere on the 'net will be this information, if someone with more time and a better connection than our lamentable slow-motion Australian NBN network cares to go and look for it. If and when you find it, please post a link.
 
There would have been several cameras taken on the climbing expedition that made it to the top of Everest in the early '50s. Edmund Hillary is known to have used a small Kodak Retina, probably a postwar 1a which had the advantage of being foldable (or collapsible if you prefer) and carried in a pocket.

Correct exposure at those great heights would have been rather a challenge.

As well, the expedition would have had an official photographer. Many years ago at an end of line book sale in Melbourne, I bought a book by an English photographer who claimed the title of official shooter for the Everest summit expedition. Beyond saying this, memory fails me for the moment - the book maybe in one of my 40 cartons of my library still stored in our garage and for the moment is unobtainable...

Somewhere on the 'net will be this information, if someone with more time and a better connection than our lamentable slow-motion Australian NBN network cares to go and look for it. If and when you find it, please post a link.


The official photographer on the 1953 Everest Expedition was Alfred Gregory. Shown here on Everest with what looks like a Contax III.





The book may be this one:

https://www.amazon.com.au/Alfred-Gregorys-Everest-Gregory/dp/0094722404


Peter
 
Maybe not past advanced base camp, but still. Wondering what the other camera is slung around the person's neck? Who was the official expedition photographer?


The person is Alfred Gregory, the official photographer:


http://itarphotos.blogspot.com/2009/10/tlr-rolleiflex-in-everest.html


In addition to a Rolleiflex, he also carried a Kodak Retina II and a Contax, possibly a III.


From Gregory's book:


My 35 mm cameras were a Contax and a Kodak Retina 2. The Contax, with 50 mm and 125 mm interchangeable lenses, was my main camera for colour but when I went high on the South-East Ridge, to almost 28,000 feet, I carried the more compact Retina up to the highest camp. Throughout that day I only shot Kodachrome from which excellent blank and white negatives were made later.

I also took a twin-lens Rolleiflex which I used for black and white. Despite being more bulky than the Contax and Retina it was extremely easy to use and with its superb Zeiss lens it was capable of producing pictures of exquisite qualityl I took it as the South Col and the final results made the extras effort well worth while. When in recent yers these three cameras were stolen I felt I had lost a very real part of history.

https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/why-i-still-use-a-leica.12930/



And an interesting discussion here on Hillary's Kodak Retina 118 on Everest:

https://www.uglyhedgehog.com/t-503611-1.html
 
Apropos of something related, sort of, to all this, as a young reporter-photographer in eastern Canada in the 1960s I often used a Rolleiflex Automat from the newspaper's photo gear locker, one that had been serviced for the Canadian winter cold.

In 1966 I was sent on assignment to Goose Bay, Labrador, the exact reason for which I have now forgotten, and took this venerable beast with me. On my firsst morning there I dressed up like an eskimo, took the camera and went out on the tarmac to shoot a few images of aircraft landing and taking off - I recall at least a dozen lovely old Douglas DC-2s and DC-3s as well as other vintage beauties from a time when flying was fun if not exactly comfortable, stood by the runway, clicked off my first shot - and the Rollei shutter froze open.

Devastated (at the time I was a newsroom 'veteran' of all of 18 years old) I took myself and the camera back indoors and related my plight to a Canadian Forces photographer, an old veteran of the game, who took the Rollei, put it in a plastic bag and placed it in the mess refrigerator - his sensible theory being it would eventually warm up in the +2C-+3C degree fridge temperature and the shutter would finish its cycle and close, which it did, about an hour later. Of course I lost that image, but, well!

The outdoor temperature at the time was -27F. I'm not sure what that works out to it Celsius/Centigrade degrees, but either way it was damn cold.
 
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