500mm F8 catadioptric has evolved in the 80s to a middle-of-the road lens. Nothing special by then at all.
What was special about the catadioptic lenses that started showing up in the '70's was the little annoying donuts of light.
Old cameras also appear in fashion model shoots. I am at a loss as to why the model holds an old camera rather than a digital one.
Is that the true camera sound?
...
Quartz-Takumar is designed for UV photography.Okay, these aren't cameras, but lenses. Remember the James Bond movie, You Only Live Twice? Bond and a Japanese woman are fleeing some bad guys in a Toyota roadster and apparently there's a TV screen and a couple of lenses mounted somewhere between the seats. The lenses are Asahi-made. One of them, the one on the left, is a run-of-the-mill 1.4/50 Super Takumar, but the one on the right is a mite unusual. It's a Quartz Takumar 3.5/85, S/N 949612. I'm not familiar with a Quartz Takumar. Are any of you?
Here's a shot showing both lenses -- this is as clear as I could get it off the screen:
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And here's a shot where the right side of the view was cropped (not by me), but it at least shows the word "Quartz" a bit clearer.
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Bond is also flying around in a gyrocopter a bit later with a funny looking "camera" mounted to his helmet -- a prop for sure. But I wasn't able to find a frame with a clear image of it.
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