f16sunshine
Moderator
Sony menus.
There seems to be universal agreement on this one 🙂
Sony menus.
Sounds like one I have, a give-away for subscribing to Time Magazine. Came with zippered vinyl soft case, strap, and lens cap. Thumb wheel for film wind. 50mm f/6 lens. Tapered slot forms diaphragm in conjunction with behind-lens leaf shutter, marked to f 16. Viewfinder is pretty vague about edges of field. Styled to look like an SLR with hot shoe on raised “pentaprism”. Film is guided over sharply curved film plane to match lens’s field curvature. There is a fixed single unmarked shutter speed that may be determined through experiment. Should try it out some day!...And then I have the Lavec 2000 in the closet. This was a marvel of plastic molding shaped like a camera and given out free to anyone who visited the local car dealer during "Blowout Weekend" My dad went, got the camera, gave it to me as if it were a.....camera. Its not. I keep it as a humorous conversation piece. The "optical lens" is a plastic meniscus that is decentered and asymmetrical. The film plane is actually curved, which you can clearly see when you open the rear door. The pentaprism housing has a simple view-through plastic viewfinder, but you can't make out anything through all the distortion of poorly molded plastic. I keep thinking I should put some film in it and seen what happens, but why waste film. Lomo wouldn't touch this thing with a 100-foot pole. But I don't hate it. I love to laugh at it even though its an unfortunate waste of my planet's resources.
The pentaprism housing has a simple view-through plastic viewfinder, but you can't make out anything through all the distortion of poorly molded plastic. I keep thinking I should put some film in it and seen what happens, but why waste film. Lomo wouldn't touch this thing with a 100-foot pole. But I don't hate it. I love to laugh at it even though its an unfortunate waste of my planet's resources.
I've thought about this, and in truth I've enjoyed every camera I have bought or been given--even the ones that made me feel fidgety and less intelligent than I am--and would have kept them all if that weren't a bit selfish and absurd, given that I have no more hands or time than anyone else.
The cameras I sold or gave away are gone for at least 2 of the following reasons:
*they had become redundant, and in their backup role were no longer being used;
*images I made with them were not as good as images others made with the same kit;
*I didn't adapt comfortably enough to their mechanics, or their finders -- in short, their discipline.
There was nothing wrong with the cameras per se. The flaws were mine. Each camera provided its moments of pleasure, instruction, discovery, serendipity. Even the Argus 44 and the Leica iiic ;-)
I've owned the Hexar AF 6 times in total. Everytime I sell it after a few weeks. Underwhelming lens, bad inaccurate AF and inaccurate frame lines. I just keep getting suckered by threads about it here on RFF
Not a hater usually, but man did I hate this camera:
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Olympus Infinity Stylus...
I've had 3 Hexar AF cameras.
I like the idea of film point and shoots, I like the party cam look of point and shoots with the onboard flash
I hate using most of them (never tried a Klasse/T2/T3, though)-
I hate how most of them focus after I fire the shutter (the AF hunt lag)
I hate how most don't give me control over the flash
I hate how I have no idea what shutter speed I'm at (a blinky LED when I'm below 1/30s would be nice)