I reckon that learning to load a Hasselblad magazine was one of the more useful tthings I learnt at Art School. A12s are easy compared to the old 12on type!
Richard
Roger, maybe we'll se a test of the new Tele in Black and White Photo from Frances in the near future?
Cheers, Tony
As for a Trabant, I don't see them at all so I guess they're a little 'exotic'....
Not so much 'exotic' as 'God-awful'. They were popular in Eastern Europe (especially East Germany) when they were just about all you could get. But I remember driving to Berlin just after reunification and there were Trabbis lying in the ditches by the side of the road, looking small and pitiful like road-kill hedgehogs or armadillos with their little legs in the air. A lot were thrown away in the first few years; the survivors now command quite high prices and there are owners' clubs.
Cheers,
Roger
I'm sure It's a very good camera, but I wonder how much market research the company has done before manufacturing them, because at the very high price they will undoubtably be in todays market and the specialized nature of their use, I may be wrong but I can't see them selling many, or making them for long since the market is flooded with high quality M/F SLR cameras and lenses at bargain prices.
I hope I'm wrong, but I just can't see the rational of marketing a product like this at this time.
I didn't know you were interested in the camera too ;-).Shall we share the costs Jeroen? One week it's mine, the other week you can use it.....
Seems that Leica and Franke & Heidecke are doing what many Swiss watch companies did many years ago. Obviously there are technically better or more accurate modern devices, but there will remain people interested in mechanical precision and fine manufacturing.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?