Well I stand corrected. Thanks. I never paid much attention to that camera, but what a beauty!
Isn't it now?
I keep asking myself why these old cameras are so gorgeous to behold. I think at least in part it's because of their inside-out design philosophy.
Meaning, for example, that one first starts with a physical piece of film. Then one begins working outward by adding the stuff required to first keep it dark. Then make it focusable. The make it exposable. Then be able to aim it. Then be able to change it for a new piece. And so on.
Each step requires more things to be layered on top of whatever solved the previous problem. Eventually one makes allowances for multiple lenses, flash units, hoods, handles, film backs, and gazillions of other specialized accessories.
What you end up with is something like the Koni Omegaflex above. Or a Speed/Crown Graphic. Or a Nikon F. Or a Hasselblad. Or any view camera. A wonderous beast of a machine, where form absolutely follows function, and strange cool stuff is attached and sticking out everywhere.
Sadly, these days it's just the opposite. Designers work from the outside-in, where function follows form.
Starting with the external form, say a smartphone case, they then labor to abstract and miniaturize via software the functional attributes and behaviors of all of the devices the platform is intended to simulate. Cameras, compasses (GPS), laptops, and maybe even telephones, if they don't forget those.
Heck, online just yesterday I even saw a two-shot firearm that had been miniaturized and squeezed into a smartphone case.
Except for the weapon, they can do this because software requires very little space to contain. It's merely abstract logic expressing ideas. A few small memory chips are all that is required. Please leave the leather and polished chrome at home, as those particular attributes are no longer desired.
Everything must fit within that originally defined volume. Which, of course, results in everybody's cell phone "cameras" looking essentially identical to each other, regardless of their capabilities. Personality and coolness have been rigorously excluded as unnecessary attributes.
And just how boring is that?
Ken