Back in the day Olympus cameras were very popular and especially popular with photographers with small hands. A lot of women bought Olympus because of their size and ergonomics. The cameras were unusual in that you changed your shutter speeds with a ring on the lens. The advantage was that you could easily change your shutter speed without taking your eye from the camera.The disadvantage was that it made each lens more expensive. Olympus lenses were very good and compare favorably to the Nikon lenses you are used to using. Olympus was a great system but of course not near as extensive as Nikon.
Back in the 80's I sold cameras at a department store. We sold Nikon, Canon, Minolta, Pentax and Olympus. I used to shoot Contax myself but I have shot other brands of 35mm cameras as well. It can be fun shooting different models. If you know what you are doing you can get great results from any brand.
My camera looks just like this one:
View attachment 97527
What I wanted to ask is: what is Olympus about? And is this the right model and lens to use (in general) from Olympus from this aera or the OM-series?
Thanks,
Bert from Holland
All good info except the underlined text. The shutter speed ring is on the camera around the lens mount, not the lens. So if Olympus lenses are more expensive, that's not the reason why. Nikkormats have their shutter speed ring in the same location.
Right. At the time, Nikkor lenses were actually significantly more expensive than other Japanese brands' lenses, with few exceptions.All good info except the underlined text. The shutter speed ring is on the camera around the lens mount, not the lens. So if Olympus lenses are more expensive, that's not the reason why. Nikkormats have their shutter speed ring in the same location.
The cameras were unusual in that you changed your shutter speeds with a ring on the lens. The advantage was that you could easily change your shutter speed without taking your eye from the camera. The disadvantage was that it made each lens more expensive.
The shutter speed ring was on the BODY, not on any OM lens! So there was no increase in lens cost due to location of the shutter speed selection.
And whether you changed shutter speed with a ring concentric to the lens, or on top of the body (as was found on most focal plane shutter SLRs), you could change shutter speed without removing your eye from the camera.
Thanks. I guess you missed it but Frank all ready corrected me on this.
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?