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Is that a Hasselblad?

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Ever been asked "Is that a Hasselbad?"

  • No.

    Votes: 294 37.0%
  • Yes, while shooting 35mm or smaller.

    Votes: 25 3.1%
  • Yes, while shooting Medium Format

    Votes: 219 27.5%
  • Yes, while shooting Large Format

    Votes: 97 12.2%
  • Yes, and it was a Hasselblad!

    Votes: 228 28.7%

  • Total voters
    795
On a hike recently I had a hiker tell his partner my Rolleiflex was an "old Kodak Brownie." Gads.
 
Gads indeed, not to mention zooks..
 
I had a winner once at the airport when the TSA agent asked me to let him inspect the "scuba diving flashlight" in my bag. I never scuba dive so I was very perplexed. Opening my bag he pointed to my Hasselblad 503cxi... I told him it was a Hasselblad and was waiting for the ITAH quetion... he just told me I could proceed with a pat down... great!
 
Soooo close...I was out yesterday with a Koni Omega Rapid M and I got a "Is that a Horseman?" I can see the resemblance so obviously, the guy knew something about film cameras.
 
I didn't belive that it will happen but today I was with a Graflex Speed Graphic + Kodak Aero Ektar, and it happened. But he know something too, he said he knows that it looks like a 3D and "is it true that it costs 1 euro per sheet?" and finally asked me if he can take a look at the GG.
 
And there's the variant, I know it's a Hasselblad! Shooting last weekend and one guy approached me asking what kind of film I was using. He was a lab technician in one of the few remaining film development labs in Sydney. About 10 mins later, from about 20 meters away, a woman I would guess in her mid-thirties called out, hey, it's great to see someone still shooting 6x6 film! I do too! Smiles exchanged.
 
I never had been asked "is that a Hasselblad, but I mostly shoot with a Canon SLR.

However, I have been asked many many times if I am with the local paper.

Actually the most flattering thing is that I was at a overlook with my camera, and a young nice couple asked me to take a photo with their film SLR since "I knew what I was doing." I also gave them my work card. Got a email 2 weeks later saying that the photo i took is framed in their house. That was one of the nicer things.
 
I was recently asked "What Leica is that?" buy one of our local self-styled experts-on-everything. I was carrying a Kiev 4a.:laugh::laugh:
 
a young nice couple asked me to take a photo with their film SLR since "I knew what I was doing."

I've had people ask me that, when I was carrying anything from my EOS 3, m645af, Hasselbladski, and Toyo G.
Too bad that every time they then asked me to take a photo of them using their phone, an area in which I specifically do not[/url] know what I'm doing
 
I have been asked if I was using a Hasselblad on several occasions, mostly when I was actually using my 2000 FC/M. There have been times where I was asked that when I was using my Mamiya C330, go figure. Most of the times when I am shooting the Hassie, it's "Nice camera!". I do often get asked what kind of camera I'm using when I'm shooting with my Canham 4x5, one guy just said "what's that?", and when I told him it was a camera, he looked puzzled and said "really?".
 
No, its not a Hasselblad!

Not the same question, but analogous. I was sitting on the ground in my front yard, taking a close-up of a dog tooth violet with my Pentax 645n. My 120 macro was mounted, of course, as was the right angle finder and a cable release. The camera was on a focus rail and supported by a Manfrotto tripod. My next door neighbor Sylvia, who is a nosy busybody, hollered "Mighty fancy camera, George. Is that a Nikon?"

Naturally I couldn't let that go unchallenged, so I told her no, it was a Pentax medium format film camera, the likes of which Nikon had never made. I don't think she had any idea what I was talking about....:whistling:
 
Never had the ITAH, but I've been asked several times if my RB67 was a movie camera. Once I had my RB on a tripod taking a shot of the foot bridge at a local park when an elderly gentleman and what I imagine was his grandson stopped about 30 feet away, and the fellow said "see that camera boy? That mans a professional, if only he knew how wrong he was. The best one happened while I was walking down the main street of a nearby town, a woman who was probably in her mid 50's stopped and asked me what kind of camera I was using. I told her it was Mamiya RB67 and it was a medium format film camera. She looked at me like I must be on drugs and said "film, film they stopped making that 20 years ago". When I assured her that film was still available she said "well where on earth do you get it developed". "I do it myself" I said, she immediately gasped and replied "surely thats illegal". I just kind of sighed and she wondered off.
 
Never had the ITAH, but I've been asked several times if my RB67 was a movie camera. Once I had my RB on a tripod taking a shot of the foot bridge at a local park when an elderly gentleman and what I imagine was his grandson stopped about 30 feet away, and the fellow said "see that camera boy? That mans a professional, if only he knew how wrong he was. The best one happened while I was walking down the main street of a nearby town, a woman who was probably in her mid 50's stopped and asked me what kind of camera I was using. I told her it was Mamiya RB67 and it was a medium format film camera. She looked at me like I must be on drugs and said "film, film they stopped making that 20 years ago". When I assured her that film was still available she said "well where on earth do you get it developed". "I do it myself" I said, she immediately gasped and replied "surely thats illegal". I just kind of sighed and she wondered off.

Oh yeaaaah! I jus' lov' sniffin' that there fixer, don' you?? Thems illeagle thangs is the very best.
 
Never had the ITAH, but I've been asked several times if my RB67 was a movie camera. Once I had my RB on a tripod taking a shot of the foot bridge at a local park when an elderly gentleman and what I imagine was his grandson stopped about 30 feet away, and the fellow said "see that camera boy? That mans a professional, if only he knew how wrong he was. The best one happened while I was walking down the main street of a nearby town, a woman who was probably in her mid 50's stopped and asked me what kind of camera I was using. I told her it was Mamiya RB67 and it was a medium format film camera. She looked at me like I must be on drugs and said "film, film they stopped making that 20 years ago". When I assured her that film was still available she said "well where on earth do you get it developed". "I do it myself" I said, she immediately gasped and replied "surely thats illegal". I just kind of sighed and she wondered off.

Good grief. Some people are alive only because stupidity is not fatal.
 
Never had the ITAH, but I've been asked several times if my RB67 was a movie camera. Once I had my RB on a tripod taking a shot of the foot bridge at a local park when an elderly gentleman and what I imagine was his grandson stopped about 30 feet away, and the fellow said "see that camera boy? That mans a professional, if only he knew how wrong he was. The best one happened while I was walking down the main street of a nearby town, a woman who was probably in her mid 50's stopped and asked me what kind of camera I was using. I told her it was Mamiya RB67 and it was a medium format film camera. She looked at me like I must be on drugs and said "film, film they stopped making that 20 years ago". When I assured her that film was still available she said "well where on earth do you get it developed". "I do it myself" I said, she immediately gasped and replied "surely thats illegal". I just kind of sighed and she wondered off.
Sadly, she's probably already reproduced - thus passing along both the genetic and attitudinal imbecility she manifests.:pouty:
 
Yesterday at the Rocky Mountain Balloon festival in Colorado Springs, it happened FOR A SECOND TIME with my Mamiya C33. I told him it was a Mamiya. He wondered what year and I told him 1964, and we were immediately separated by 2 guys dragging a rope to stretch out a 2nd wave balloon. It came between us and I never saw him again.

A little later, a woman came by. Judging by her equipment she seemed to really have her digital act together, and she said, "Now there's challenge!" I gave her a big smile and nod and thought, "That's somebody who GETS it".
 
Yes, I was using my RB67 yesterday in the park and a big guy with a digital camera asked me the dreaded question.
 
I've recieved that too. Twice, in fact. That was when I was using my Yashica TLR. It's also been called a brownie, box camera, 3D camera, and a couple people have mistaken it as a Rolleiflex.
 
Someone once asked if my Pentax 645N was a Bronica or Mamiya.
That's as high up the food chain as I have ever gotten.
 
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