cooltouch
Member
I just picked up one of these. I think it is ideally suited for street photography/candids.
@cooltouch I've got one of those, a 1970s vintage German-built model (with a few more dings than yours; I've had the top off several times to reset the meter linkage, which disconnects if the camera gets a hard bump). I've done most of my street shooting with a Canonet G-III QL17, but I've also used various Minolta 16 variants (almost invisible in the hand -- can't buy preloaded film any more, but I've got several cassettes I can reload), and a couple times an early post-War Super Ikonta B (6x6 coupled rangefinder folder). Also Ricoh Singlex II with Super Takumar 50/1.4 (M42 mount SLR, 1970s vintage, one of the earliest metal leaf focal plane shutters).
View attachment 242883
2007, Canonet G-III QL17, Superia Xtra 400, Dignan 2-bath C-41, Greensboro, NC
@cooltouch I've got one of those, a 1970s vintage German-built model (with a few more dings than yours; I've had the top off several times to reset the meter linkage, which disconnects if the camera gets a hard bump). I've done most of my street shooting with a Canonet G-III QL17, but I've also used various Minolta 16 variants (almost invisible in the hand -- can't buy preloaded film any more, but I've got several cassettes I can reload), and a couple times an early post-War Super Ikonta B (6x6 coupled rangefinder folder). Also Ricoh Singlex II with Super Takumar 50/1.4 (M42 mount SLR, 1970s vintage, one of the earliest metal leaf focal plane shutters).
I just picked up one of these. I think it is ideally suited for street photography/candids.
I think I'm going to get some street photos out of my Kiev 4M once the streets are open to people again -- shutter's so quiet I can barely hear it with my face against the camera, and if I don't need to change exposure I can focus with SLR accuracy in a second or so. Getting the "Contax grip" sorted out -- haven't covered the RF window the last 4-5 times I raised the camera. With a 35 mm Jupiter-12 I should be able to shoot from the hip, like I've done for decades with other small 35 mm cameras.
Yes- I love my Rolleicord, which is the Aldi version so to speak and it's been giving me sterling service in Edinburgh recently. I have fond memories of the ITAH thread!Rolleiflex TLR. Phenomenal picture-taking lens, near silent (so completely inobtrusive), and even when you're spotted with it, many people will smile and respond positively (even if they do mistakenly identify it as a Hasselblad because it's the only camera name they know besides Canon and Nikon, which they know by the form factor that it isn't one of those).
Yes, I saw a Zenography video on various Kievs recently... the shutter on the recording sounded whisper quiet (except with the slow-speed timer engaged, of course.) I didn't know it was that quiet. You must have an example that's been maintained!
In all honesty, I think a Kiev (the kind without the meter. I get the model numbers mixed up) might be my next Russian camera. They're so... camera-looking, and the shutter is a very attractive feature.
I think mine was CLA'd before the Russian or Ukrainian seller put it up on eBay (and no, I haven't checked it with a Geiger counter, but there can't have been many of these cameras in the exclusion zone anyway). Meter is accurate, shutter timings seem right, even though the slow ones look weird (I've seen multiple sources that say the original Contax II and III ran the shutter at a slower travel speed below 1/25), everything functions as it should. Won't know how accurate the RF is until I get the first film processed, which will be after I get more bottles and a CineStill C-41 powder kit (inexpensive, good capacity, not ORM-D so can ship Priority etc., and ships cheaper because not mailing a bunch of water).
As I recall, the Kiev 2 and 3 were exact duplicates of the Contax II and III respectively (Contax III had the high profile meter -- I've seen a video on YouTube titled "World's Tallest Rangefinder" about the Kiev 3). The Kiev 4A is no meter with a few minor changes that probably made it less expensive to build (deleted the fold-out foot by the tripod socket, for instance), and the Kiev 4M is the same with a meter, but lower profile, more like the meter on a post-War Contax IIIa. The 4M is the one I have. There were also some shutter changes, not necessarily tied to models -- at some point they went from 1250 top speed to 1000 (probably without actually changing anything mechanically; I strongly doubt they were ever faster than 1/1000). The 4 models have a two-position rewind button; push a little and you can double expose (shutter cocks but film doesn't advance), push further and it unlocks the takeup and sprockets for rewind.
Yes, CineStill quart kits are all I use. I can get about 20 rolls out of one, with the odd 120 roll thrown in. You know you can mix the bleach and the fixer separately?
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Did you try testing the RF with a piece of scotch tape across the film gate with the shutter open? As long as the tape is taut and where the film would go, it should tell you something.
Yes, that's why the blix comes as two components. Bleach regenerates with air -- aquarium pump and airstone and you can double the life of your bleach, if not more. Any rapid fixer will work for fixer -- but no one seems to sell Color Developer by itself any more. Last time I did color, I could buy all the Flexicolor chemicals I wanted, but now nobody seems to have them in stock. Only the small quantity kits -- though $25 for 20 rolls doesn't seem all that bad. Might be low enough I won't feel like I need to mix my own developer.
I first tested focus with frosted tape across the film gate on a Kodak Reflex II in about 1975. I just didn't think to do it with this camera before I loaded it. For that matter, even with my microscope eyes, on a 35 mm frame, it's hard to tell well enough without an actual loupe.
I had quite forgotten that! Of course it would follow logically but I wasn't even thinking about it. There is the trouble that that becomes a little more difficult to do once you have cut them for use on a home film scanner, but there's always developing trays...I haven't dug up most of my darkroom equipment or my M42 SLRs and lenses yet. It'll come. I could probably reverse my 25 mm telescope eyepiece and get good results, or take the Jupiter 8 off my Kiev 4M...
The beauty of bleach bypass -- you can undo it if you don't like it. Just put the film back in the tank and give it the stock bleach and fix, and there you have it.
I would love to do some street photography but in my small town there's precious little going on in the street these days....
I also have a confession to make: the best stalker camera is a small waist-level camera, and I'm not aware of any film cameras than can do that, so my best candid shots are all digital.
I honestly do not know how to take a candid like shown below on film.
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