Best 35mm Camera ever made!

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Alan Gales

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The best 35mm camera ever made? It must have been the Canon Sure Shot. Back in the 1980's at Venture, we probably sold more of them then all our other 35mm cameras combined.

A few of the customers would ask me what I shot. When I replied Contax, they had never heard of the brand! :D
 

jscott

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best, best, best, usually means the wrong thing ... generally "highest performing". The Consumer Reports version of "best", which gets check marks in more categories, but has little or nothing to do with actual use and life experience.

I knew a man who was arguably the 'best' mountain climber of his generation. He bristled at the word "best".

"The best climber in the world is the one having the most fun!" -Alex Lowe

By this more thoughtful definition, the best 35 mm camera might be the one used the most by the most people with the least trouble and the most satisfaction. I don't know what that would be (I like mechanical cameras) but these days it might actually be a DSLR.
 

Sirius Glass

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Nikon F-100
 
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No he had sold me one earlier.

I believe the phrase for that is "Post-marketing support. [A special photo equipment manufacturer program intended to obfuscate or eliminate buyers remourse]." :wink:

Enjoy it Marv and use it in good health. (Although my fave is still the F2A)
Mark
 

sangetsu

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There's no doubt about it," you are what you own".

If I was what I ate, I would be a cheeseburger.

I love cameras. When I as young the best I could afford was a used FE. I began trading in cameras as I had a knack for repairing them (I learned jewelry and watch repair at my part-time job when I was in university). Trading in cameras allows me to finance my hobby, the list I posted shows the cameras I have now, but last year the list was different. Next year these will be gone, and I will have a new list. Each year I trade up a level, and get cameras which are more special. I have a couple literal "one-of-a-kinds" which I have taken a lot of time to restore.

I have shot with pretty much anything which holds film, and I enjoy them all. Today I was shooting with a Hello Kitty camera that cost me $1. In addition to the Hello Kitty camera, I was trying out a Nikkor SLR (oddball early Nikon F). "Best" is in the eye of the beholder, but as a repair person, and a collector of heavily used pro gear of all makes, I find Nikon to be the most sturdily built, and the most flexible. I also like the style of he early Nikon F and S cameras.
 

Chris Lange

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I own three different systems, Nikon (manual and AF), Canon FD and Yashica, and couldn't care less which I'm using. Each delivers sharp images within the limits of a 35mm negative or transparency. My preference is for reasonably compact, fairly light cameras, if only for the fact I'm more likely to carry one with me, but hauling a metal bodied manual camera can be fun, so long as I wasn't expected to do it habitually.

Perhaps it comes down to whether you believe photography is something that fits into your life, or life has to revolve round photography? My best shots often come while doing something else, so some photographic compromises have to be made regarding the range of lenses carried and weight of camera bodies. I rarely feel under-gunned with an SLR and a 50mm 1.4 lens, but a 24mm acts as a comfort blanket in another pocket. For the times even an SLR is too much, my Olympus Mju II is as minimal as a 35mm camera can expect to be.

My fave SLR camera would have the optics of Contax, the build quality of a mechanical Nikon and the size of a Pentax ME with pancake lens.

So a Leica M3/2/4 with a zeiss lens?
 
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Marvin

Marvin

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I thought this would get a lot of responses as everyone has their favorites. The things I like about the F5 is Color Matrix Metering, fast autofocus, the last Nikon film camera with interchangeable finders, and it is built like a tank. The only thing that I might worry about is that the electronics may go at some point. I also like that the FX lenses and my SB600 from my DSLRs (Oh did I say that) work fine on the F5. Many of the images in National Geographic were made with the F5 and Kodachrome.
 

blockend

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So a Leica M3/2/4 with a zeiss lens?
I was under the misapprehension the M series were rangefinders :wink:

In the past I've borrowed an M3, and while it's certainly a beautifully made camera, it didn't instill the must-have factor. The area in which Leica rangefinders excel, street photography, has been colonised to a large extent by d*g*t*l cameras like the Fuji X-series. I prefer medium format folding cameras for a larger negative and pocketable size. Pre-focused, they're hardly any slower that a 35mm camera, very quiet and cost a fraction of Leica prices. For 35mm the Olympus clamshell designs do most of what a Leica can and are shirt pocket sized.
 

Josef

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Canon F1N, 1V, Leica M6, MP, R6.2, Contax RTS 3, Nikon FM3, and Pentax LX.
 
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this is so not important, my fav carry around, a nikon FG20 with 50/1.8 series E pancake, weighs almost nothing and fits into a jacket pocket. SLR with most features Ricoh XRP hands down
 
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