What have you just BOUGHT?

Both the alpha & omega of the folding Kodak Retinas, 30 years of 35mm evolution. It was quite a touch of luck to have both in a few days, and both quite cheap, considering that from among the Retinas, the 117 and the IIIC come generally at an extra price.


The Retina (117) was made in 1934-35 and it's the World's first camera designed for the 135 format daylight cassette. Still not tried with film, but appears to work perfectly well.


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And the Retina IIIC (028) was made decades later, in 1958-1960, and it's the most advanced Retina model, at least among the folding ones. Works well, with only the problem of a wildly inacurate film advance indicator, so you end without knowing were you will reach the end of the cassette. With the added problem that when approaching the 1 you have to "jump" the indicator again to 36 to avoid the blocking of the advance.


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As I said, alpha & omega, beginning and end of this beautiful and compact family, made in Stuttgart.


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well as one knows in the classifieds here, I bought a IIIF with a collapsible 50 summicron...
YAY , Thank You Jan !

comes tomorrow ~ Thursday
my only concern: Will My Eyes be able to do well , with that little Barnack VF , hope so.
I do wear glasses when shooting
 
well as one knows in the classifieds here, I bought a IIIF with a collapsible 50 summicron...
YAY , Thank You Jan !

comes tomorrow ~ Thursday
my only concern: Will My Eyes be able to do well , with that little Barnack VF, hope so.
I do wear glasses when shooting


Cool!

IIIF should have plastic frame for RF, VF.
 
Thanks Kostya,

tomorrow the big day out and about with Miss IIIf
testing my Eye Power & old school of loading film , lol
 
Haha, had me hysterical, well done Charles
Must google some German now... the curse words of course !

Naturlich...

As a teenager I was sent to Germany on an exchange with the son of a German Colonel. The Oberst was intensely keen to try out his English so I learned little German apart from the verboten stuff from his son and friends, which later stood me in very good stead when I took over a team of German bankers in Frankfurt, and loading my III.
 
Bought a X100V two days ago, it takes some to get used to. When I first put in the SD card I tried to wind the "film" thinking it was a film camera.
 
well as one knows in the classifieds here, I bought a IIIF with a collapsible 50 summicron...
YAY , Thank You Jan !

comes tomorrow ~ Thursday
my only concern: Will My Eyes be able to do well , with that little Barnack VF , hope so.
I do wear glasses when shooting

Yours looks like a beauty Helen. You might find the SBOOI indispensible. I know i did.

unnamed by
 
A Zeiss Ikon Contaflex II, made c. 1954. It has a sticker inside telling that the original retailer was a shop in Osnabruck, Germany.

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And a Graflex Century Graphic, complete with Synchro Compur shutter & Schneider Kreutznach Xenar f3.5 / 105mm lens. It also has a very useful flash & remote release handle and 120 format back. The flash is mine.

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I just bought a very nice condition IIIf RDST from KEH and am finishing a roll to make sure the shutter is ok.
 
Canon 135mm f/3.5 LTM

Canon 135mm f/3.5 LTM

A Canon 135mm f/3.5 LTM telephoto lens from a local camera shop. The lens looks nice and clean and the focus and aperture ring are very smooth.

The first time I took it out, I made a stupid mistake. :bang:. :eek: I mounted it on my FED2. It went on easy, was a pain to take off. The Canon LTM lenses use a 'tongue' to couple to the rangefinder, rather than the ring that the FSU lenses that I have use. The FED2 has a feeler that works fine with a ring, but catches on the tongue.

I hope that I didn't damage the FED2 rangefinder. :bang::eek::eek:

Steve W
 
That Graflex Century Graphic looks great. It looks like it will b e a lovely little camera.

Steve W
A Zeiss Ikon Contaflex II, made c. 1954. It has a sticker inside telling that the original retailer was a shop in Osnabruck, Germany.

49690620406_101b059346.jpg



And a Graflex Century Graphic, complete with Synchro Compur shutter & Schneider Kreutznach Xenar f3.5 / 105mm lens. It also has a very useful flash & remote release handle and 120 format back. The flash is mine.

49691216656_6a2e4a4d05.jpg
 
Giving it another try....


One More Try
by Vince Lupo, on Flickr

This is the sixth Hasselblad that I've owned. For some unexplained reason, I seem to fall in and out of love with them, be it a 500C, C/M, EL/M, SWC, you name it. Well I thought I'd give it one more try.

The 500C body was one of those KEH-bought, sight-unseen 'as-is' specials. Turns out that it's a lovely, working body, and it's a first-year (1957) model, which I really wanted. The waist-level finder is another 'early' example (small magnifier, which I also like) and is in nice shape. The lens, lens hood and film back came from another source and are all in super condition. Speaking of the back, the fellow from whom I bought it thought it was a '12' back -- turns out it's a 16S back, which is also known as the 'super slide' size (2"x2"). I was going to send it back, but I thought what the heck, let's give it a try while I wait on the 12 back. I made a mask for the ground glass out of some black-core matboard, took it out this morning and shot a roll of FP4 Plus. I just developed the roll -- I actually quite like that size! Now, I don't think it's going to replace a 12 back anytime soon, but it does add some versatility to the camera, and it was cheap enough.
 
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