I always liked the Contax 139 with 50mm f/1.7 lens.
It's small for an SLR but it's not a "pocket" camera.
If we're going that route then a Pentax MX and 40mm "pancake" lens would be ideal. It will fit in a coat pocket, which is handy if the weather isn't behaving.
It's not just about size, but image. An SLR says serious, maybe intrusive. A compact is just a snapper. In some circumstances it's an important difference.
I always liked the Contax 139 with 50mm f/1.7 lens.
It's small for an SLR but it's not a "pocket" camera.
Although I don't have one, I am certain a Contax 139 would be past the right side of this lineup. The Olympus Epic truly is a pocket size camera - not only in size but weight too. The Nikon 35Ti is pocketable but it is in the heavy side. The half frame Olympus Pen FT is small - no mirror hump, and the lenses are small too. It is an SLR and definitely it's robust construction makes it almost the weight of the MX/OM1. So just how cool and/or compact really . . .
Can I also suggest the Nikon AF6000 (Lite Touch)? It's got a 28/3.5 lens and can be had on ebay quite cheaply. The only issue with it is that it doesn't read 800 & 1600 film. So as long as you shoot only 100, 200 and 400 films you're fine.
My daughter owns an Olympus OM1 and the Contax 139 was about the same size. A little thicker maybe but not quite as long and much more ergonomic. Of course I am going by memory here.
Try this http://tomchuk.com/misc/rf/ It's astounding precise. You can stick it to the back of the camera. Besides: The lens is only 40mm. If you don't try to make macros you will get away with hyperfocal focussing most of the time.The only thing I'd be uneasy about with the Rollei is the fact that it's a viewfinder rather than rangefinder camera. I have used a 1930s Zeiss folding camera which lacked any means of measuring the distance to subject and found it frustrating. When I put it on a tripod and used an SLR to find the right focus (read off one camera's focus scale, transferred to the other) the resulting images were very sharp indeed, but if you shoot it hand-held without any guidance for focusing you quickly find why old photos tend to be soft!
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