What camera are you?

Great thread. In my year of birth Leica reintroduced the IIIa, Contax had its first SLR, the Contax S, and Canon-then the Precision Optical Co.- brought out the Canon SII. On a more pedestrian level there were the Kodak Retina II and the Brownie Six-20. Bless me, this is ancient history, archeology rather! :eek:
 
hugivza said:
I'm totally stuffed as a child of 1942. I think that oldest camera I have is either a Zeiss Ikonta with a Zeiss Opton Tessar, which is probably immediately post WWII, or an Zeiss Ikoflex I circa 1948. I was unable to take photos at birth, being less precocious than some, but probably could have at the age of 6 if I had a camera. It certainly would not have been one which would have graced these forums!!


There is the Hasselblad Rossex. And you were born in the year that the greatest film ever, Casablanca, was released!
The picture comes from THIS site
 
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jaapv said:
There is the Hasselblad Rossex. And you were born in the year that the greatest film ever, Casablanca, was released!
site

Hello,

Some people would say the greatest film ever was Tri-X.

Clarence
 
1981 . . . Canon AE-1 Program came along that year. Funny, or maybe just totally logical, that the AE-1 was the ubiquitous camera of my childhood. It was my mother's camera, and was present pretty much constantly until only maybe 5 years ago. Then she gave it to me, and I put it somewhere "safe". Never put anything anywhere safe.
 
The Kine Exakta would be me. I own a later model - the Exakta VXlla from about 1956. The same year I was born came the Contax ll and that same year plans were formulated to introduce a new kind of Contax camera - the Contax S, a reflex camera. Wonderful year for cameras .
 
October 1950

In October 1950, David Duncan during a visit to New York goes public with the news of how Nikkor lenses were superior to German lenses. <snip> Nippon Kogaku and Nikkor become then famous outside Japan. This boosted the Japanese camera industry.

Oh yeah and I was born too, and THAT boosted the German AND Japanese camera industries for decades to come!
 
Other than Canon becoming Canon Inc, and some televised event of a landing (allegedly shot in a studio) a few miles away on some rock... 1969 doesn't seem to offer much.
 
Well, this is a big decision. 1939 was an intresting year.

I could be an Argus C3. My Grandfather had one of those and took hundreds of slides. No light meter, just used the chart that came with the film. I have a C3 in my collection - good solid simple camera.

I could also be a Pilot Super SLR. Neat MF camera. Very simple and rugged. I don't have one of these.

Most exotic would be the Riken Gokoku No. 1. A MF camera that looks a lot like a Leica. I'd love to have one of these in my collection!

Guess I'll go with the C3. It's me - simple, rugged, long lasting!
 

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Ok, 1966 was actually a pretty interesting year. According to various websites the following cameras were introduced:
The Olympus PEN EE-EL, EES-EL, FT, FV Quickmatic 3.5 and 2.8 as well as the 35LE
The Rollei 35
The Yashica Electro 35
The Nikon F
... and there are more, but mostly slrs/medium format.


But ultimately I think I'm a lens because in 1966 Leica introduced (from the Leica website):
The LEICA NOCTILUX 1:1.2/50 mm is the first 35mm camera [I assume they mean lens] with an aspherical element.

Cheers,
Alex
 
Olympus Wide (1955)
In 1955 Olympus introduced the Olympus Wide. Designed specifically for wide-angle photography, the Olympus Wide was an Olympus 35V camera fitted with a wide-angle lens. To facilitate framing, the camera featured a natural-light bright-frame finder. The Olympus Wide became hugely popular because it provided an easy way to take superb, wide-angle photographs that had previously only been possible using expensive cameras with exchangeable lenses. The Olympus Wide helped to pioneer the subsequent wide-angle camera boom.

nemjo

ps.: - Kodak began selling color films without the cost of processing included, as the result of a consent decree signed in 1954. The long-term result was the creation of a new market for Kodak, providing products and services to independent photofinishers.
 

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1975 - I guess I'm a Canon F1 (and here I am trying to get rid of my F1N's, I guess I'll be locked into the FD mount now forever. ;) )

Interestingly, the first CCD based flatbed scanner was released the same year. As was a CCD based astro camera.

The OM2, and AE1 were also released that year - but I'm not a huge auto exposure fan, so I couldn't roll with those.

Leica *stopped* production of both the M4 and M5 in 75.. can I choose one of them?
 
If I were a camera bag in the year I was born, I'd be carrying a Leica IIIf, Nikon S, and Hasselblad 1000f. I could do a lot worse.

I am actually looking for a Leica IIIf made on the same day in 1953 that I was born. That would be something....
 
Unfortunately, in 1971, not a whole lot of exciting Olympus was made :(

If I have to choose from the slim pickings, I am the 35 DC

Pro: Good lens
Cons: No (manual) control

heh, I don't wear glasses and I am a scatter-brain, sounds like me alright :D
 

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My choices are mostly SLR:
  • Nikon F3
  • Nikon F3HP
  • Pentax LX
  • Pentax ME-F (world's first TTL Autofocus SLR!)
  • Bronica SQ
  • Mamiya ZE / ZE-Quartz
  • Konica FC-1
  • Minolta CLE
  • Rollei SL 2000F
  • Minolta XD-11 (model d)
  • After 15 pages of results on Google, I got tired of looking...
I don't really know anything about that list of cameras there, so I guess if I had to pick one that was "me", it'd be the Bronica. Why? The wife is always saying I'm square... :(
 
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