68degrees
Well-known
Do they even exist?
there have been a handful of 24x24mm cameras, but only one SLR:
http://www.shutterbug.com/content/me...ormat-35mm-slr
But none of them SLRs.Robot made a few: Recorder 24, Robot IIa, Star, Star II Vollautomat. Then Pentacon made the Taxona. Zeiss has the Tenax I and Tenax II. All rather rare stuff.
Robot made a few: Recorder 24, Robot IIa, Star, Star II Vollautomat. Then Pentacon made the Taxona. Zeiss has the Tenax I and Tenax II. All rather rare stuff.
As far as I remember, there were no square format 35mm SLRs ever built. But there have been 24x36mm SLRs modified to square size, with a film gate mask, matte mask and different transport gear - done for technical or medical photography applications and correspondingly utilitarian. Many of them are hardly fit for general photography as they have other single-purpose restrictions (e.g. grid powered long magazine, fixed "medical" ring flash lens, single shutter speed) beyond the size modification. And of course they have no size advantage over the 24x36 they are based on.
The closest to a genuine 24x24 SLR (arguably about 28mm square) would be the rare few "Instamatic" 126 SLRs made in the late sixties to mid seventies by Kodak, Rollei and perhaps some more.
Indeed, my fault. But then you have the Alsaphot Alsaflex. Not an SLR in the sense that it doesn't use a pentaprism but you look through the lens.
Sevo I would like you to modify my Nikon FM with mask and special transport gear and make it do 24x24 square photos. When can you have it done? Thanks.
the idea would be to save film otherwise no mods would be needed, just crop the image later. So in my perfect world, both a mask and a transport mod would be required and put some lines on the viewfiinder. I wonder how many 24 x 24 images could be had from a 24 exp roll?
Since the portion you take off each frame is a third of what remains, expect to get 36 exposures from a 24 exp. roll.
BUT
save film, buy a Zenit-MT-1 Surprise (half frame Zenit-19 variant). 😀
http://camera-wiki.org/wiki/Zenit_MT-1_Surprise
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To convert a 126 Instamatic film camera to 35mm, you'll need to black out the window on the cartridge, as well as the camera back.
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In about 1972 I bought one in working condition from Williamson's of Sauchiehall Street in Glasgow. I sold it quick as it was worth FAR more as a collector camera than as one to use.Oh dear, yes, the Mecaflex. Never seen one in working condition, though...