DavidClapp
Member
Retire and Old Standard, forget my C3 / C330f and buy a Rolleiflex 3.5F Xenotar?
I spent a few days in London last weekend, shooting with a 'new' 1934 Rolleiflex Old Standard 621. At just £40 it was simply the best buy, a really talking point of late, but by first outing was far from a success - the heavily vignetted viewfinder and reflected stray light causes me immense difficulty focusing outdoors. It multiplied my reaction times to a slow, confused grind. Still I managed two test films which I have yet to develop.
After visiting Mr Cad, a 'real' London Camera store, the question of modifying the Standard came up. Should I overcome this obstacle with modifications? A new mirror and a focus screen change? Then came the answer I didn't want to hear - 'Just use it like it is, its a classic, use it'. The historic shop owner had finalised my thoughts, whilst inspecting backwards through the viewing lens. I nodded in reluctant agreement, after all a good workman never blames his tools. I couldn't help to feel a little empowered as he handed it back, surrounded by intriguing cabinets full of antiquities and I fell into a dream, imagining myself 'cleaning up in Soho', intuitively wielding my piece of photographic history.
Sadly, it was very much the opposite. That afternoon I watched as shot after shot slipped through my fingers, to the point where I didn't even bother to shoot. I also pondered that perhaps our modern times of modern paranoia have killed street photography. Maybe frame grabs from a rolling 4k movie was the answer?
Yet as I walked smiling through the bustling Saturday afternoon, admiring glances and conversation came from the Standard delicately worn round my neck. I was able to take a street portrait or two with my 'proper camera', portraits without suspicion, portraits that were offered. This old camera gave me immediate access, it brought out the best in people and in me, a classic camera.
My Mamiya C3 and C330f are just too heavy for an 8hour wander, the Standard on the other hand is so light I barely notice it and makes me playful - no camera bag, just slung round my neck whilst enjoying London. So I am considering another Rolleiflex, a 3.5F Xenotar, with a working meter. I am sure to relish the brighter viewfinder, faster working, meter, no mods, kept as standard.
What are your opinions on all this?
(picture below shows my C330f, Rollei Old Standard and a friends Rolleiflex, I don't know the model)
View attachment 165296
I spent a few days in London last weekend, shooting with a 'new' 1934 Rolleiflex Old Standard 621. At just £40 it was simply the best buy, a really talking point of late, but by first outing was far from a success - the heavily vignetted viewfinder and reflected stray light causes me immense difficulty focusing outdoors. It multiplied my reaction times to a slow, confused grind. Still I managed two test films which I have yet to develop.
After visiting Mr Cad, a 'real' London Camera store, the question of modifying the Standard came up. Should I overcome this obstacle with modifications? A new mirror and a focus screen change? Then came the answer I didn't want to hear - 'Just use it like it is, its a classic, use it'. The historic shop owner had finalised my thoughts, whilst inspecting backwards through the viewing lens. I nodded in reluctant agreement, after all a good workman never blames his tools. I couldn't help to feel a little empowered as he handed it back, surrounded by intriguing cabinets full of antiquities and I fell into a dream, imagining myself 'cleaning up in Soho', intuitively wielding my piece of photographic history.
Sadly, it was very much the opposite. That afternoon I watched as shot after shot slipped through my fingers, to the point where I didn't even bother to shoot. I also pondered that perhaps our modern times of modern paranoia have killed street photography. Maybe frame grabs from a rolling 4k movie was the answer?
Yet as I walked smiling through the bustling Saturday afternoon, admiring glances and conversation came from the Standard delicately worn round my neck. I was able to take a street portrait or two with my 'proper camera', portraits without suspicion, portraits that were offered. This old camera gave me immediate access, it brought out the best in people and in me, a classic camera.
My Mamiya C3 and C330f are just too heavy for an 8hour wander, the Standard on the other hand is so light I barely notice it and makes me playful - no camera bag, just slung round my neck whilst enjoying London. So I am considering another Rolleiflex, a 3.5F Xenotar, with a working meter. I am sure to relish the brighter viewfinder, faster working, meter, no mods, kept as standard.
What are your opinions on all this?
(picture below shows my C330f, Rollei Old Standard and a friends Rolleiflex, I don't know the model)
View attachment 165296
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