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Heading out with my Rollei 35

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DonW

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Well it only took 15+ years to get it back from my EX! Still in tip top shape. Got it loaded up with a roll of Classic Pan 400. A member here Eric Rose sent me 40 rolls of the stuff awhile back. He claims semi-stand development in PyroCat-HD and rate the film at 125asa gives good negs. This will be my first try with this film.

Getting back to the Rollei, I had both the Sonnar and Tessar versions but found the Tessar one produced better images so I sold the Sonnar. That was years ago.

Guess what? After all this time the meter is still spot on!

Don
 
I've got a Rollei 35 (Tessar version) that I traded for in 1974. In between, it spent twenty years or so in my dad's care, then my brother's for a while, but after all this time, it still makes excellent images.
 
Keeping in mind that focusing is guesstimation with Rollei 35, putting a Sonnar on camera was a pointless advertising ploy. The 3.5 Tessar was the perfect choice.
congratulations on renewing ownership!
 
Hyperfocal is my friend. Went out to a local park today and exposed about 26 frames. Ten to go!
 
I have never had problems with guesstimating the distance with my Retina Ib, and it has a 50 mm Xenar. It should be even easier with a 40 mm Tessar and a film speed that lets you stop down a little. :smile:
 
Keeping in mind that focusing is guesstimation with Rollei 35, putting a Sonnar on camera was a pointless advertising ploy. The 3.5 Tessar was the perfect choice.
congratulations on renewing ownership!
I have never read that argument before...but I like it seeing as I have the lowly Triotar.
 
Hard to tell a Xenar from a Tessar from a Triotar when you shoot at f/11 or so. Load 400 speed and go.
 
I loved shooting color film through the Sonnar.
 
The shutter still ok after all these years? All the Rollei 35 cameras I've looked at had sticking shutters under 1/30 sec. And I've looked at a lot.
 
Can't say about OPs, but mine doesn't stick. Slowest speed (1/2, as I recall) works perfectly and seems accurate. I might have opened it up and cleaned it at some point, however. Heaven knows I've had the top cover off enough times to fix linkages that jumped off their push-bars after being dropped. Now I have a wrist strap, should cut down on that problem. If only I could find replacements for the two top cover screws that got lost when my Dad or brother had it.
 
Just developed the roll. All the images except for one turned out fantastic! Somehow I got one frame double exposed. The meter is even still spot on.
 
Somehow I got one frame double exposed.

Wow, that's quite a trick. I don't even know offhand how to do that intentionally with a Rollei 35. I expect the usual 35mm method will work, but I have no idea how you'd do it accidentally.

Still, good to know the camera and meter work. I haven't checked the meter in mine since I dug it up; can't change the battery while it's loaded, anyway.
 
Just developed the roll. All the images except for one turned out fantastic! Somehow I got one frame double exposed. The meter is even still spot on.

2 1/2 months later?

Guess it's the kind of camera that you can't put down.
:wink:

p.s. post some up.
 
I shot slide film in mine (Sonnar) on a trip to Morocco many years ago. Some of the best pictures I ever made.
 
2 1/2 months later?

Guess it's the kind of camera that you can't put down.
:wink:

p.s. post some up.
I should! Unfortunately life gets in the way of fun sometimes. Right now my darkroom is setup for an alternate use. Patience typically is not my strong suit but in this case I have to exercise it. Bummer. But soon!!
 
Somehow I have ended up with 4, 3 Tessars and a Sonnar. The Sonnar is "different" but my favorite is a Germany made Tessar. Really hard to beat a good Tessar. Oh, they all work.
 
Really hard to beat a good Tessar.

Truth. It was a good lens in 1920, it was a good lens in 1970 (when Polaroid selected it for the SX-70, which didn't make it to market until '72), and it's still a good lens in 2020.
 
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