jbielikowski
Jan Bielikowski
Rolleinar 2 with bay I just arrived... and now I know 3.5 C does not have bay I, Tessar was misleading. Nevertheless 15mins and some cardboard made it fit.
Now you can also add two diopters such as the 1 and 2 to get object distances […]
The prismas on the viewing lens will line up and there is much fun to be had here. Enjoy!
I just got an interesting Bay 1 set on eBay--there's a Rolleiparkeil and two Carl Zeiss Jena Proxar 1. I'm guessing the Zeiss Jena Proxars will be fairly decent, though probably not up to Rollei standards.
The Duto filters (Invented by the hungarian photographer Jenö Dulovitz and marketed with his business partner Mikos Toth (DUlovitz-TOth)) are indeed soft filters. The softening effect depends on the aperture, and work best at 3,5 - 5,6.Also included were two Bay 1 Rollei Dutos, 0 and 1. I seem to recall that the Duto is some kind of soft focus filter? Do they perform well? How are they best used?
If I'm not mistaken, Richard Avedon did most of his portrait work with a Rolleiflex and a Rolleinar.
JT
my rollinar set #1 bay 1 does not have one that is thicker than the other both are the same ...did they ever come from Rollei like this or did someone put two of the taking filters together (it did come in a nice Rollie case)
Thanks a lot for that post, Thomas78! That completely clears up my confusion about my Bay1 set. I have two Rolleinar 1, two 2, a Rolleiparkiel and the more modern pair for the Rolleinar 3. I guess the rolleiparkiel is for use with both 1 and 2?There are two different versions available.
The older version consist of two rolleinar, one for each lens and a "rolleiparkeil" (a prism) for parallax compensation, so there are three pieces.
The more modern version has a rolleinar for the taking lens and a combination of the prism and a rolleinar in one piece, the "Heidosmat-Rolleinar" for the viewing lens.
I guess the rolleiparkiel is for use with both 1 and 2?
No, the Rolleiparkeil 1 is for the Proxar/Rolleipar/Rolleinar 1 and Rolleiparkeil 2 is for the 2.
The "keil" (wedge-prism) gives a little different perspective in the two versions.
(Rolleipar, the "par" is german for "pair", because it comes in sets of two, one for the viewing and one for the taking lens. The Rolleiparkeil is then the third accessory).
The advantage with the three-piece set is that the two plain close-up lenses can be used together when using the plate adapter. Then you can focus directly on the film plane. (You can also use a Paramender, like the one for the Mamiya TLR's, and use the close-up lenses on the viewing lens first for focusing, and then put them on the taking lens and move the camera up with the Paramender).
The "keil" (wedge-prism) gives a little different perspective in the two versions.
(Rolleipar, the "par" is german for "pair", because it comes in sets of two, one for the viewing and one for the taking lens. The Rolleiparkeil is then the third accessory).
Not quite. Pair is "Paar" in German (double a). As you wrote "Keil" is for wedge, so this is a "Keil" which compensates the parallax ("Parallaxe" in German).