spystyle
Established
Hello from Maine,
This may be a dumb question but I was very curious, after thumbing through the photo book "Dream Street" (click), if anyone knew what cameras famous photographer W. Eugene Smith used?
I tried Googling it but to no avail. I thought it was a longshot but maybe one of you well-read fellas might know.
Thanks,
Craig
This may be a dumb question but I was very curious, after thumbing through the photo book "Dream Street" (click), if anyone knew what cameras famous photographer W. Eugene Smith used?
I tried Googling it but to no avail. I thought it was a longshot but maybe one of you well-read fellas might know.
Thanks,
Craig
marco ferrarini
Newbie
I imagine that he would have used the professional quality 35mm rangefinders of his era. I've seen at least one image of Mr. Smith at work with a couple of Zeiss Contax's dangling from his neck.
Platinum RF
Well-known
He used Canon RF
justins7
Well-known
He used everything. I know he sometimes shot with a Rollei, as well as Nikon rangefinder. I believe he used a Leica screwmount for the "doctor" series (for Life magazine), but later he used Nikon SLRs as well. There are photos of him absolutely covered in cameras, with a few rangefinders and an SLR.
xayraa33
rangefinder user and fancier
I know he used Minolta SR slr cameras in photographing the Minamata mercury poisoning series and I seen pics of him with what looks to be a Barnack Leica( he used a Barnack Leica with Flash for the Spanish villiage series) and an other pic with him using a Kodak Medalist.Hello from Maine,
This may be a dumb question but I was very curious, after thumbing through the photo book "Dream Street" (click), if anyone knew what cameras famous photographer W. Eugene Smith used?
I tried Googling it but to no avail. I thought it was a longshot but maybe one of you well-read fellas might know.
Thanks,
Craig
I get the feeling that W Eugene Smith could not care less what camera he used, a great photographer, but his magic touch was certainly in his printing.
He was one of the best talents in the darkroom.
benlees
Well-known
Don't forget those cool Olympus Pen ads he was in! Not sure if actually used them...
oops... should have looked at Fred's links...
oops... should have looked at Fred's links...
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J. Borger
Well-known
There probably is not a camera of his time he did not use.
Anything from 35mm to 4X5. RF and SLR.
Anything from 35mm to 4X5. RF and SLR.
spystyle
Established
DanOnRoute66
I now live in Des Moines
Smith used so many cameras because he often was broke and would pawn off equipment simply to make ends meet. When he got paid he would buy whatever struck his fancy as useful at the time. A good lesson there, I think, when I spend too much time thinking about equipment and not enough shooting! The Olympus Pen F stuff was an endorsement deal and I, too, wonder how much he actually used it.
xayraa33
rangefinder user and fancier
looks to be a Reflex Korelle
http://www.camerapedia.org/wiki/Reflex-Korelle
kkdanamatt
Well-known
Yes, a Reflex-Korelle...
Yes, a Reflex-Korelle...
...probable fitted with a Meyer Telephoto lens.
Yes, a Reflex-Korelle...
...probable fitted with a Meyer Telephoto lens.
Chriscrawfordphoto
Real Men Shoot Film.
...probable fitted with a Meyer Telephoto lens.
Yep. Its a prewar era 6x6 SLR.
Chuck Albertson
Well-known
He used everything. Take a look at the new book on his loft in the Flower District---it even reproduces some of his pawn tickets.
.ken
I like pictures
This one is classic 

spystyle
Established
Oh the cap is on!
Nokton48
Veteran
Reflex Korelle with Meyer tele is spot-on.
spystyle
Established
DanOnRoute66
I now live in Des Moines
This one is classic
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Yes, I often get the works of W. Eugene Smith and Posh Spice confused with one another.
spystyle
Established
I think she was a famous WW2 photographer 
burninfilm
Well-known
As others have stated, Smith used everything. When he started getting into photography, he used an old Kodak Autographic with a packfilm back that belonged to his mother. As he progressed, he purchased a 4X5 Graflex SLR, then started used 4X5 Speed Graphics. All of this occured during high school. Eventually, he also acquired an Ikoflex, a Rolleiflex (Smith preferred the lens on the Ikoflex), a Super Ikomat, and a Zeiss Contax. At a young age, Smith was already winning photo contests promoted by Zeiss Ikon, which is partly how he acquired a few of these Zeiss products. It wasn't until his college days that he became interested in the Leica cameras available at the time.
During his professional career, as can be seen in the photos given earlier, he continued using just about anything. Minolta SLR, Leica M, Rolleiflex, Olympus Pen, etc.
He's a good example of how the equipment really doesn't matter!
This information comes from the book W. Eugene Smith : Shadow and Substance : the Life and Work of an American Photographer. So, if you want some more information on this photographer, it's worth a look.
During his professional career, as can be seen in the photos given earlier, he continued using just about anything. Minolta SLR, Leica M, Rolleiflex, Olympus Pen, etc.
He's a good example of how the equipment really doesn't matter!
This information comes from the book W. Eugene Smith : Shadow and Substance : the Life and Work of an American Photographer. So, if you want some more information on this photographer, it's worth a look.
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