Theo Sulphate
Member
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Tessina
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Those are amazing in design and ability. They'll never make anything like that again.
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Tessina
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They were insane, didn’t they use a special 35mm cartridge that you needed to load from a standard one?Tessina! Thats insane. its a horizontal TLR.
Yes, of course, with a 28.95mm register the Pen could adapt almost any SLR lens. I have adapters for OM and M42 and 'T' mount. But adapted lenses can be quite large while the made for Pen F Zuikos are very compact, if you don't mind them being slow. I have the 20mm f3.5, 25mm f4, 38mm f1.8, 100mm f3.5 and a very ratty 150mm f4. I also have the large and heavy (but constant aperture) 50~90 f3.5. The zoom isn't used unless I cannot stand in the place I want for the composition I want.The Olympus Pen has adapters for practically every lens mount. Here I am using a Nikon adapter which may be of interest to the OP.
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They were insane, didn’t they use a special 35mm cartridge that you needed to load from a standard one?
Almost all of the Tessinas that I see offered for sale have non working slow speeds...and even then they are not cheap. Used Tessina became more expensive after Watergate. Also, many folks in the subminiature crowd believe that despite larger negative that results are significantly better than from a Minox. Never having used a Tessina, I an just reporting comments that I have read.
However, it seemed to me that carrying a Tessina on the wrist would be more obvious than a Dick Tracy wrist radio.
That is a short list. I would say a Nikon F or F2 with a non-metered plain eye level prism.Let's re-ask the question another way. What 35mm SLR is the smallest that gives a 100% viewfinder representation of the actual film area?
Let's re-ask the question another way. What 35mm SLR is the smallest that gives a 100% viewfinder representation of the actual film area?
Good point - concerning 100% vievfinder I just remember some colleagues who play the playLet's re-ask the question another way. What 35mm SLR is the smallest that gives a 100% viewfinder representation of the actual film area?
100% is OK, 97,475 % is also OK!That is a short list. I would say a Nikon F or F2 with a non-metered plain eye level prism.
There just was not that many 35mm SLR's that had a 100% viewfinder. I think my OM-1 has a 96% VF area. You know it is hard to print full frame unless you have an oversize neg carrier. Not sure about scanning, but I suppose you could capture 100% of the negative.
Pentax also made the world's smallest interchangeable-lens SLR system camera: the Pentax Auto-110. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentax_Auto_110
As far as I know, only the Nikon F series (F - F6) all have 100% viewfinder coverage. So I guess the plain prism F and F2 would be the smallest SLR with 100% coverage. If you want a metered prism then that would have to be the F3.Let's re-ask the question another way. What 35mm SLR is the smallest that gives a 100% viewfinder representation of the actual film area?
I think Matt wins the Jackpot with Olympus Pen F.Olympus Pen F series.
The you are talking about full frame which is also called double frame 35mm cameras. The smallest SLR would be the Olympus Pen F.
May be I am wrong but S L R should indicate Mirrow Reflex (S piege L R eflex )
don't tell me that is wrong pls.!
When I saw the title of the thread I thought, well, Hasselblad of course. Until I realized it was posted in the 35mm forum.
You are wrong.
SLR means Single Lens Reflex
There is no equivalent abbreviation in German.
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