silverhalidedreamer
Established
I appreciate all of the responses.
Thank you for sharing your opinions.
Thank you for sharing your opinions.
I'm honestly not sure what a II/III sells for these days, the last time I got myself a 1936 II a few years ago I paid from memory $200 to the son of the late owner who bought it new in London in 1936. But the problem of course with the pre-war cameras is finding one that really does work, or, learning to sort them out yourself. I did the latter. By all means get one: I still maintain the II/III has the finest rangefinder installation ever fitted to a 35mm camera. It is of phenomenal quality. All I am saying is be aware that buying a Contax is one thing: being able to use it, is another all together. Given the scarcity of technicians willing to work on one these days, you must be sure any prospective purchase really is in good repair, or, that you have a way of making it so....even the IIIM?
I was settling; what I really want is a Contax ii/iii with a 50mm 1.5. Perhaps selling this will help offset the cost.
But you guys are making intriguing arguments. I am a sucker for Zeiss normal lenses.
Forgive my ignorance; what is a "Barnack" camera? Is it like the old, screw mount Leicas? If so, which do you recommend?
Forgive my ignorance; what is a "Barnack" camera? Is it like the old, screw mount Leicas? If so, which do you recommend?
...And then again...it is an slr. The only one I find it difficult to get rid of is an Olympus OM10, but that is because I love the 50mm 1,8.
I agree that fine photo equipment should be used. Collectors annoy me.
I generally prefer rangefinders.
I'm honestly not sure what a II/III sells for these days, the last time I got myself a 1936 II a few years ago I paid from memory $200 to the son of the late owner who bought it new in London in 1936. But the problem of course with the pre-war cameras is finding one that really does work, or, learning to sort them out yourself. I did the latter. By all means get one: I still maintain the II/III has the finest rangefinder installation ever fitted to a 35mm camera. It is of phenomenal quality. All I am saying is be aware that buying a Contax is one thing: being able to use it, is another all together. Given the scarcity of technicians willing to work on one these days, you must be sure any prospective purchase really is in good repair, or, that you have a way of making it so.
Please don't ever assume an as found one will be reliable. They are a reliable camera but curtain ribbons simply get too old. Any fitted with its original set will have only handfuls of shutter actuations left in them, if that. They will break. Not might break. Will. Replacing them is not as difficult as some people seem to think it is (less work than swapping curtains in a Barnack, for instance). But getting the shutter running really well may be harder. FYI.
ll I am saying is be aware that buying a Contax is one thing: being able to use it, is another all together. Given the scarcity of technicians willing to work on one these days, you must be sure any prospective purchase really is in good repair, or, that you have a way of making it so.
Please don't ever assume an as found one will be reliable. They are a reliable camera but curtain ribbons simply get too old. Any fitted with its original set will have only handfuls of shutter actuations left in them, if that. They will break. Not might break. Will. Replacing them is not as difficult as some people seem to think it is (less work than swapping curtains in a Barnack, for instance). But getting the shutter running really well may be harder. FYI.
@lynnb:
Nice images. Got any more?
Oh I don't know. Life is short. They are a fabulous camera. And very reliable once sorted. It's just that whilst silk is a very strong material, it does not last forever. Zeiss chose silk because of its durability, resistance to stretch and ability to resist wear. But decades later the fibres have deteriorated, probably at a molecular level. You can take a piece of original 1930s Zeiss ribbon that still appears to be in perfect condition, but as soon as you hold it in both hands and place a little tension on it with thumbs and fingers, the fibres can disintegrate like gossamer.This is why I have not "pulled the trigger" yet on the one I am eyeing on evilbay.
Thank you for this advice. I probably should just get over the Contax.
There is something about the Zeiss 50mm 1.5 that I find compelling.
The camera is just a box, remember; the lens does the drawing. If you like Zeiss lenses, find yourself the one you want in Contax mount and stick it on an adapter, such as the Amedeo version, then mount that to a Leica M body. You have the best of both worlds there.
You could also get a screw mount Leica or Leica copy (Leotax, Nicca, Canon, Fed, Zorki, Kardon, Reid, Yashica, Minolta, etc) then find the Zeiss 5cm in LTM and have fun. Or, buy the Leica copy and find 10 Jupiter-3 lenses, and pick the best couple. The Jupiter-3 and Jupiter-8 are fantastic lenses and I wouldn't buy a Zeiss simply because the Jupiters are that good. Again, this is my opinion.
If you've only experienced Konica Auto S fixed lens rangefinders, but like the glass, pick up a Autoreflex T3 with a few lenses. Some of the Konica Hexanons (not Hexars) were and still are, considered among the very best lenses ever made by any manufacturer. Every camera maker had a few exceptional lenses, and every one had some dogs. Even the dogs have their place though, because photography should be fun, not clinical science.
If you're bent on shooting only Konica RF glass, save up your money for a good sample of anything other than the 50mm f/3.5 Hexar. Even those are starting to go for a high amount these days.
Phil Forrest
The camera is just a box, remember; the lens does the drawing. If you like Zeiss lenses, find yourself the one you want in Contax mount and stick it on an adapter, such as the Amedeo version, then mount that to a Leica M body. You have the best of both worlds there.
You could also get a screw mount Leica or Leica copy (Leotax, Nicca, Canon, Fed, Zorki, Kardon, Reid, Yashica, Minolta, etc) then find the Zeiss 5cm in LTM and have fun. Or, buy the Leica copy and find 10 Jupiter-3 lenses, and pick the best couple. The Jupiter-3 and Jupiter-8 are fantastic lenses and I wouldn't buy a Zeiss simply because the Jupiters are that good. Again, this is my opinion.
If you've only experienced Konica Auto S fixed lens rangefinders, but like the glass, pick up a Autoreflex T3 with a few lenses. Some of the Konica Hexanons (not Hexars) were and still are, considered among the very best lenses ever made by any manufacturer. Every camera maker had a few exceptional lenses, and every one had some dogs. Even the dogs have their place though, because photography should be fun, not clinical science.
If you're bent on shooting only Konica RF glass, save up your money for a good sample of anything other than the 50mm f/3.5 Hexar. Even those are starting to go for a high amount these days.
Phil Forrest