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Mamiya 645 100s I found on ebay and received today. Everything works and has had light seals replaced.
Thanks, I've got it all loaded up with some Ektar 100, Just waiting for some better weather.That looks really nice.
Nice tabletop photography as well.
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Mamiya 645 100s I found on ebay and received today. Everything works and has had light seals replaced.
My latest THREE!:
Mamiya/Sekor 1000 DTL
Pentax SV
Pentax SP-II/
A Yashica Yashinon-DX 50mm f/1.7,Dear Mr. Three-grid vacuum tube,
Which were the M42 lenses you got?
View attachment 204510 A nice little Voightlander Perkeo II 120 folder. Shutter speeds are off at lower speeds and there is a touch of fungus in the lens, but it’s otherwise in good shape.
...Trip 35 ...
These are appealing and have a good reputation. How are the selenium meters performing after 46 years? I've become wary of selenium-metered cameras recently, but the ones on the Trip 35 seem big enough to generate some voltage for a few more decades.
My first Pentacon! ...
If i win the lottery, i am buying a bigger house and buying more 35mm SLR.I just got yet another Pentax MX!! Yay!!
I was having fun lately with the Trip 35 I was given for Christmas in 1972.
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These little cameras are tiny, light, silent, have an excellent 40mm/f2.8 lens, auto-exposure and zone focus. You can even see the exposure and focus setting through a tiny window in the viewfinder. If I were interested in street photography I would say this is a super-stealthy camera for that job. For me, their beauty lies in the fact that this tiny package takes care of nearly all the photographs I want to take on a roadtrip - generally wide-angle landscapes at infinity in sunshine. You don't actually need a bigger camera . . .
I was a bit put off when I first got it to find it uses a zone focus system, but after using it a couple of times, I no longer worried about it.
I have in the past had many and diverse cameras make and model, but around thirty years ago decided to rationalize my gear and that I liked the Canon F1( Fin and New F1 ) more than any other camera ( I now have two of each ) and I sold all the rest and have since seen no reason to buy any other camera film or digital because they do everything I need. and I've been using them for so long I can operate them instinctively.Benjiboy, while I agree with your attitude toward photo gear (and my all-time favorite camera is the Canon F-1n, by the way), I also find that I just like a lot of different cameras. Many years ago, I was a one-marque shooter, but these days I really enjoy being able to use various models from various makers. There were so many really good cameras that were made back in the 70s and 80s -- it's just so hard for me to stay away at times. But I've finally built up a sufficient inventory (I hate calling it a "collection") such that I'm no longer prone to impulse buys (although I'll admit that I find it hard to pass up examples like near-mint Canon FTbs for $20 or so, but I already have four of them, so . . . ). With the possible exception of FTbs, what I've tried to do instead is restrict my buying impulse to one item of one model. That's worked pretty well for me, with the exception of Canon F-1s (the old ones, not the New F-1) and Nikon F2s. I have a pair of each of them. It's hard to resist picking up reasonably priced F-1s and F2s. They are, after all, the best mechanical cameras made by both companies.
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