cdowell
Member
After seeing some great photos from folders on another thread, I decided to take a swing at a camera that my wife inherited -- a Zeiss Ikon Ikonta 521.
The entire thing was dirty (especially the interior of the lens) and the focus was all but frozen, but I got it apart and cleaned the lens (gently, I hope), then used Goo-Gone with cotton swabs to de-gunk the focusing mechanism. I was surprised how much dirt I got out out of it. I put it back together without lubrication, which seems to be working OK. The faster shutter speeds seem to work but it jams open at anything slowish.
The snag came when it was time to put everything back together in that the front element of the lens could be threaded in more than one way, none of which resulted in a dead stop at the Infinity focusing mark. I think I figured out that the retaining screw works as a rotation limiter. Using wax paper and the B setting, dim images that I can barely see anyway sort of appear recognizable, so I decided to run a roll of film through it.
That's when things got hilarious. I went to the gardens near my house and happened upon, as near as I could tell, a Quinceanera photo shoot. It was quite a production (hair and make-up, a dress that seemed 20 feet long...) but I when asked if they minded if I took a picture, they were so nice about it that they stopped the shoot and gave me the spot where the photographer was standing. The subject straightened her back and began smiling, so there I was trying to figure out how to work the camera on the spot with four or people watching.
The photographer was interested in my old camera and gave me his business card so I could share the photos I took. I'm hoping for the best but will have to wait until the film (color) gets back before I know how it went. I seemed to just be pointing the camera -- no idea what the finder on the top is supposed to accomplish since it is about the same as looking through a round hole with no 6x4.5 matting that I noticed. Maybe I got lucky and can have a new career as a vintage Quinceanera photographer.
Here's a photo of how opaque the lens was and one of the cleaned up camera, which I have to say is pretty cool just to look at. Fingers crossed.
The entire thing was dirty (especially the interior of the lens) and the focus was all but frozen, but I got it apart and cleaned the lens (gently, I hope), then used Goo-Gone with cotton swabs to de-gunk the focusing mechanism. I was surprised how much dirt I got out out of it. I put it back together without lubrication, which seems to be working OK. The faster shutter speeds seem to work but it jams open at anything slowish.
The snag came when it was time to put everything back together in that the front element of the lens could be threaded in more than one way, none of which resulted in a dead stop at the Infinity focusing mark. I think I figured out that the retaining screw works as a rotation limiter. Using wax paper and the B setting, dim images that I can barely see anyway sort of appear recognizable, so I decided to run a roll of film through it.
That's when things got hilarious. I went to the gardens near my house and happened upon, as near as I could tell, a Quinceanera photo shoot. It was quite a production (hair and make-up, a dress that seemed 20 feet long...) but I when asked if they minded if I took a picture, they were so nice about it that they stopped the shoot and gave me the spot where the photographer was standing. The subject straightened her back and began smiling, so there I was trying to figure out how to work the camera on the spot with four or people watching.
The photographer was interested in my old camera and gave me his business card so I could share the photos I took. I'm hoping for the best but will have to wait until the film (color) gets back before I know how it went. I seemed to just be pointing the camera -- no idea what the finder on the top is supposed to accomplish since it is about the same as looking through a round hole with no 6x4.5 matting that I noticed. Maybe I got lucky and can have a new career as a vintage Quinceanera photographer.
Here's a photo of how opaque the lens was and one of the cleaned up camera, which I have to say is pretty cool just to look at. Fingers crossed.

