Guth
Appreciative User
My wife decided to tackle a bit of cleaning in our basement storage room today. This lead to my discovery of a camera that I thought had been lost, or perhaps worse had been thrown away by accident.
I bought this little Yashica not long after I learned of a New York City taxi driver who took pictures of the city while driving his cab. He used these cameras to make his photos and he ended up publishing a book of his photos called "Drive-By Shootings" (which I also ended up buying).
At this point I don't even know if this camera still works or not. I stuck a battery in it and everything seemed normal. It still had a roll of film in it with one exposure left to be made. That seemed to go just fine and then the camera automatically rewound the film. So far so good. This might prove to be fun. I'll be keeping my fingers crossed as the weatherproof nature of the camera would come in handy here in the damp surrounds of Oregon.
It doesn't look like there are too many point 'n shoot folks here on this forum but I'm wondering if anyone else here ever have one of these cameras? If so I'd be curious to know how it worked out for you.
I bought this little Yashica not long after I learned of a New York City taxi driver who took pictures of the city while driving his cab. He used these cameras to make his photos and he ended up publishing a book of his photos called "Drive-By Shootings" (which I also ended up buying).
At this point I don't even know if this camera still works or not. I stuck a battery in it and everything seemed normal. It still had a roll of film in it with one exposure left to be made. That seemed to go just fine and then the camera automatically rewound the film. So far so good. This might prove to be fun. I'll be keeping my fingers crossed as the weatherproof nature of the camera would come in handy here in the damp surrounds of Oregon.
It doesn't look like there are too many point 'n shoot folks here on this forum but I'm wondering if anyone else here ever have one of these cameras? If so I'd be curious to know how it worked out for you.

These are sought after these days and used by many people... either use it or sell it. Either way, it`ll be good for you.
Fjäll
■̷̛̈́̉̓́̽&
I've had mine for about 4 years now. The super scope feature comes in handy more often then one might think. Flippy screen ala 1990. Very sharp and contrasty lens on this one. I shot mostly b&w film in it as the colours out of it never did me over. I never intended to get one of these but at 3$..! I wouldn't be surprised if you could get at least 300$+ for it along with that box and pouch.
petronius
Veteran
DennisM
Established
Yashica T4 Super
Yashica T4 Super
I also have one; very sharp lens and excellent meter (excellent for slide film). They are now a cult camera. I met the author of Drive-By Shootings on the street in NYC (in front of a store on the street with his dog). Then, found and purchased the book. The book is excellent too.
Yashica T4 Super
I also have one; very sharp lens and excellent meter (excellent for slide film). They are now a cult camera. I met the author of Drive-By Shootings on the street in NYC (in front of a store on the street with his dog). Then, found and purchased the book. The book is excellent too.
B-9
Devin Bro
Used the T4D a lot, great little camera with a sharp lens.
Nothing spectacular, it is after all a point and shoot very indicative of its time.
Purchased my black T4D for 0.65$ at a thrift shop, sold it later for 300$
Nothing spectacular, it is after all a point and shoot very indicative of its time.
Purchased my black T4D for 0.65$ at a thrift shop, sold it later for 300$
Austintatious
Well-known
Yep ! I have the book (Drive by Shooting) and have owned Yashica T2, T3 and still have a T4.
They are nice little point and shoot cameras.
They are nice little point and shoot cameras.
lxmike
M2 fan.
great cameras, a little overpriced though
farlymac
PF McFarland
Fine little cameras. This first shot was done inverted, then flipped and cropped after fixing the horizon line. I think the AF chose the fence line. These were low res scans I got from the drug store before they quit developing film.

Tinker Mountain Dapple by P F McFarland, on Flickr
This one was taken the conventional way.

Waters Hues by P F McFarland, on Flickr
It's one to hang on to.
PF

Tinker Mountain Dapple by P F McFarland, on Flickr
This one was taken the conventional way.

Waters Hues by P F McFarland, on Flickr
It's one to hang on to.
PF
Last edited by a moderator:
kuvvy
Well-known
It’s a good performer. I’ve had the T5 and the T4 before that, currently got the T3 Super which I’m goin to sell. All have fine lenses.
Guth
Appreciative User
Wow, it seems that quite a few here have owned these. Nice to know that it's still fairly well regarded (and rather funny to learn that it's somewhat of a cult camera). I had the Yashica along with me yesterday and tried to snap a shot of the back bar at my local pub. I did not realize that by default the flash setting is on automatic mode. I nearly blinded my bartender as a result. Now that I've experienced this embarrassment, I don't think that I'll be making that mistake again any time soon. Egads.
ColSebastianMoran
( IRL Richard Karash )
Had one, great camera, great lens. Not using it, I sold it here.
Highway 61
Revisited
I had a black T4 in the late 1990s then sold it out. It's a decent P&S with some flaws : quite long to get ready to take photos after you switched it to ON, very low AF, enormous shutter lag, good lens but with lots of vignetting in the corners if you use films slower than 400 (the lens vignettes a lot if the diaphragm isn't quite closed, and really much more than, say, the Tessar 3.5 of a Rollei 35, probably because of the shutter unit being installed behind the whole optical group and not inside the optical elements).
The very high prices of those Kyocera plastic toys on the nowadays second hand market are quite... well !
The very high prices of those Kyocera plastic toys on the nowadays second hand market are quite... well !
Guth
Appreciative User
I had the roll of film developed that was sitting in the Yashica. The film turned out okay and with the exception of the couple of shots needed to finish out the roll all the other images appeared to be taken well over 10 years ago. I’m shooting a roll of film with it now - grabbing shots of family today — Happy Thanksgiving by the way!
If all checks out okay with this roll of film (I have no reason to believe otherwise except that the camera was sitting for so long) then I’ll likely pass it along to someone else. We’ll see how things go.
If all checks out okay with this roll of film (I have no reason to believe otherwise except that the camera was sitting for so long) then I’ll likely pass it along to someone else. We’ll see how things go.
Guth
Appreciative User
Here's one of the images that I shot somewhere around 13 years ago or so...

Autumn Dodge by Bill Guthrie, on Flickr

Autumn Dodge by Bill Guthrie, on Flickr
Rayt
Nonplayer Character
Great lens. The waist level finder is a blast for street.
bucs
Well-known
I found one of these in a thrift store 3 days ago. Funny because at the same time last year I also found a mju i. Bought the mju for $1 then sold for $120.
I bought the t4 D for $3 then flipped on the interwebs for $400. It felt like I won the lottery. Crazy prices for these point and shoot nowadays. I hope I find a Leica next time haha.
I bought the t4 D for $3 then flipped on the interwebs for $400. It felt like I won the lottery. Crazy prices for these point and shoot nowadays. I hope I find a Leica next time haha.
nikon_sam
Shooter of Film...
I was looking for something camera related and came across this Yashica T in my closet...it had a roll of film in it and a set of batteries...the batteries started to leak but didn't do any damage to the camera, just a little discoloration on the battery door contacts.
I took pictures of it to post on ebay when I get ready to sell some of this stuff I don't use anymore...
I don't remember when I got it or where...
I took pictures of it to post on ebay when I get ready to sell some of this stuff I don't use anymore...
I don't remember when I got it or where...

kram
Well-known
I had the T4, Great camera. Mine went 'missing' under strange circumstances (i. E Stollen, but I had no proof). I should have replced with the T5. But replced with a Fuji super mini, my mistake, and regret. I never really got on with that camera.
Guth
Appreciative User
I'm reviving my own thread as this story has taken a few twists & turns since I originally created it. As mentioned previously, all looked good with the camera (it still looked like new to be precise). I was able to finish out the roll of film that had been sitting in the camera while it was tucked away in storage. I decided that I'd shoot another roll of film with the camera just for fun. Then I decided to list it on Ebay.
Shortly after posting it up on Ebay I decided to scan a couple of images from the roll of film that I had last shot with it. That's when I realized that there appeared to be a couple of frames that were slightly overlapping one another. Disappointed, I quickly pulled the listing from Ebay. I thought that perhaps the 36 exposure roll of film was just too much for the camera (the roll of film that the camera had originally been found with was only a 24 exposure roll). After doing a bit of reading it sounded as if there was a possibility that the contacts in the camera were not reading the DX encoding on the film canister correctly. So I tried cleaning up the contacts as best I could even though they looked just fine. Then I forgot all about the camera.
A couple of weeks ago I decided to test the camera out. I loaded roll of Ilford HP5 Plus 36 exposure film just as before. Well I got the film back from the lab and surprisingly all looks good. 37 exposures in all and no overlapping frames. I'm not sure that cleaning the contacts had anything to do with it to be honest. Also, I'm not sure how I would feel about listing this for sale again, although I suppose I could do so with some sort of a disclaimer explaining all of this. I'll try running another roll of film through it first and see how it goes.

Beware The Little Repairman by Bill Guthrie, on Flickr
Shortly after posting it up on Ebay I decided to scan a couple of images from the roll of film that I had last shot with it. That's when I realized that there appeared to be a couple of frames that were slightly overlapping one another. Disappointed, I quickly pulled the listing from Ebay. I thought that perhaps the 36 exposure roll of film was just too much for the camera (the roll of film that the camera had originally been found with was only a 24 exposure roll). After doing a bit of reading it sounded as if there was a possibility that the contacts in the camera were not reading the DX encoding on the film canister correctly. So I tried cleaning up the contacts as best I could even though they looked just fine. Then I forgot all about the camera.
A couple of weeks ago I decided to test the camera out. I loaded roll of Ilford HP5 Plus 36 exposure film just as before. Well I got the film back from the lab and surprisingly all looks good. 37 exposures in all and no overlapping frames. I'm not sure that cleaning the contacts had anything to do with it to be honest. Also, I'm not sure how I would feel about listing this for sale again, although I suppose I could do so with some sort of a disclaimer explaining all of this. I'll try running another roll of film through it first and see how it goes.

Beware The Little Repairman by Bill Guthrie, on Flickr
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