Glad you have restraint; I hope to get DOWN to 20 cameras in a year or two after I retire.My last camera purchase was an RB67 Pro SD last year, bought from Japan as NOS. I think this is the last (film) camera I will ever buy as I already have maybe 20 cameras.
My oldest friend was cleaning out an apartment in Queens this summer and he came upon a cache of photo gear, which found its way to me. An old fan-fold flashgun, Weston and Gossen light meters, an Agfa Clack camera, a Kodak Jiffy Six-16 camera... and a 1955 Leica IIIf with the collapsible 50mm lens! It's in seemingly perfect condition, I've got a test roll of Tri-X in it now.
Despite constantly being surrounded by cameras of all kinds since infancy, I have never really handled a Leica before. (Both my Jewish parents had served in WWII, and they weren't ever going to spend a cent on anything made in Germany, especially expensive Leicas or Linfhofs. Our photo gear was all American or Japanese.) So, I have spent a long time walking around carrying the camera unloaded, getting used to its even-more-manual-than-I'm-used-to controls. Frankly, with the current state of my vision (*), positioning my eye correctly with the rangefinder is really difficult, even with my better eye. And impossible wearing my glasses. That's a problem.
(* Recent exams found cataracts in both eyes, but they're not advanced enough for insurance to pay for surgery yet; besides that, I've got 20-30 vision in one eye, and 20-50 in the other.)
Is it one of the most historically important cameras of all time and an incredibly gorgeous piece of machinery? Yes! Do I envision myself shooting with it often? No. That is, unless the images from this test roll absolutely blow me away. We'll see.
After a lifetime of using Nikon and Olympus SLRs (and many other cameras, though essentially none with rangefinder focusing), I can't imagine that working this Leica will ever feel "natural" to me at age 68. That's MY limitation, not the camera's. It's amazing.
My oldest friend was cleaning out an apartment in Queens this summer and he came upon a cache of photo gear, which found its way to me. An old fan-fold flashgun, Weston and Gossen light meters, an Agfa Clack camera, a Kodak Jiffy Six-16 camera... and a 1955 Leica IIIf with the collapsible 50mm lens! It's in seemingly perfect condition, I've got a test roll of Tri-X in it now.
Despite constantly being surrounded by cameras of all kinds since infancy, I have never really handled a Leica before. (Both my Jewish parents had served in WWII, and they weren't ever going to spend a cent on anything made in Germany, especially expensive Leicas or Linfhofs. Our photo gear was all American or Japanese.) So, I have spent a long time walking around carrying the camera unloaded, getting used to its even-more-manual-than-I'm-used-to controls. Frankly, with the current state of my vision (*), positioning my eye correctly with the rangefinder is really difficult, even with my better eye. And impossible wearing my glasses. That's a problem.
(* Recent exams found cataracts in both eyes, but they're not advanced enough for insurance to pay for surgery yet; besides that, I've got 20-30 vision in one eye, and 20-50 in the other.)
Is it one of the most historically important cameras of all time and an incredibly gorgeous piece of machinery? Yes! Do I envision myself shooting with it often? No. That is, unless the images from this test roll absolutely blow me away. We'll see.
After a lifetime of using Nikon and Olympus SLRs (and many other cameras, though hardly any with rangefinder focusing), I can't imagine that working this Leica will ever feel "natural" to me at age 68. That's MY limitation, not the camera's. It's amazing.
Just Google The Leica Freedom Train. There is a lot of information available to read on the subject.What your parents did not know is that Leica went out of its way to save Jews. One of the things Leica did was to train as many Jews as it could to build and fix their cameras and sent them to the Leica factories in the US before the war broke out. Leica did more than that, but I do not have a good reference so one could learn more.
Just Google The Leica Freedom Train. There is a lot of information available to read on the subject.
Exakta Varax IIb with Jena Pancolor 50mm, F2 lens. This camera cannot have been used much before being relegated to a drawer or closet. Unfortunately, time has frozen the focus helicoid and the shutter only "double-fires"; it appears to release the first curtain on the first press and the 2nd shutter on the 2nd push of the shutter release button. It gets in line for repairs behind many other cameras, but is a nice example of this model.
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I just got one also. I bought from ebay in Germany (body only) offering about $85. Descriptions said it worked well, but when I got it, the shutter was sticking. I contacted the seller and got about $50 back, then had it CLA's (~$125), and now it works fine. It is a companion to my Exakta VX.
I am not sure what happened, but I found myself in posession of 3 Pentax *ist bodies. Two working, third sold "for parts" but mostly works. Well, the first two are still en route so working or not yet remains to be seen.
Maybe I need counselling.. or joining Anonymous Old Camera Buyers..
Welcome to Photrio. No, do not need to join Anonymous Old Camera Buyers however if you want to avoid such buying you have come to the wrong place. We enable buying and collecting cameras.
Thanks. What about enlargers? I feel like I have one coming..
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