Europan
Member
You’re right, I didn’t think of it. Old habits never die, I’m a movie cameraman.On a screwmount Leica it is impossible to view the film gate without disassembling the camera.
You’re right, I didn’t think of it. Old habits never die, I’m a movie cameraman.On a screwmount Leica it is impossible to view the film gate without disassembling the camera.
How do you think that Fuji will be working when it is 80 or more years old?I have two screw Leica on my desk and often I ask myself why I don’t take these beauties out.......
Because then I see my Fujifilm x100f and before I know I’m out shooting the Fuji.
Go to any flea market or junk yard and you will see 80 year old detrius - and that's the good stuff that hasn't rusted, rotted, or just been thrown away. There has always been crap and bipedal magpies. It is not a new phenomenon as some would have you believe.How do you think that Fuji will be working when it is 80 or more years old?
What is being made today that will last 25 or more years? I have a friend who uses a 1931 A model Ford as a daily driver during summer. Durability and maintainabilty seem to be very low on the list of virtues; consumers have allowed themselves to be trained by the marketeers into some sort of bipedal magpie, bringing home an endless stream of shiny crappy things to clutter the nest.
How do you think that Fuji will be working when it is 80 or more years old?
What is being made today that will last 25 or more years? I have a friend who uses a 1931 A model Ford as a daily driver during summer. Durability and maintainabilty seem to be very low on the list of virtues; consumers have allowed themselves to be trained by the marketeers into some sort of bipedal magpie, bringing home an endless stream of shiny crappy things to clutter the nest.
How do you think that Fuji will be working when it is 80 or more years old?.
I guess it will be almost as death as I will be
True, absolutely true. But that was not part of the question.
I had Leica's from M2 op to M6, only the M5 I didn't own or use. Absolutely magnificent pieces of mechanical photographic equipement
But, before the digital swap, I preferred to sh
Go to any flea market or junk yard and you will see 80 year old detrius - and that's the good stuff that hasn't rusted, rotted, or just been thrown away. There has always been crap and bipedal magpies. It is not a new phenomenon as some would have you believe.
Because it's fun using a camera that's as old as I am and still works! Bought my first Leica (a IIIc) when I was a college freshman over 50 years ago and still enjoy using it. Have an M3 too but the little Barnack is just plain fun to use.I was looking at and started reading about the Leica iiif and iiig cameras. Why would one of these screw mount cameras be favored over an M2 or M3 ? The M2, M3 and M4 look to me to be so much more user friendly.
I find the viewfinders of all the preceding barnaks just horrible.
They're truly great tools and hark to a time when one was expected to take time and think about what one was doing.Last week had a IIIa with me when I went to shoot a two-alarm woods fire. Used a pre-war uncoated 35 Elmar and one of the worst auxiliary viewfinders ever made - a Tewe. As I expected, everything worked well and the black and white prints were easier to make thanks to lower contrast - black fire gear and white smoke are a challenge for any film. I have, and shoot, Ms, but I can get anything with a Barnack that I can shoot with an M.
I've wondered the same myself, until I owned a number of different models.I was looking at and started reading about the Leica iiif and iiig cameras. Why would one of these screw mount cameras be favored over an M2 or M3 ? The M2, M3 and M4 look to me to be so much more user friendly.
This comment is on topic because it pertains to the lenses that a thread-mount Leica user will come across. I always wonder why the ePrey sellers of old lenses even add this inane platitude to their listings.Yes, it's otherwise known as"haze" and "cleaning marks that will have no effect on the image".![]()
It's ignorance. Plain and pure. I have a ca. 1906/8 9 1/2" Dagor with a 9mm gouge in the rear surface, right across the middle. Also, I have a perfect example of the same lens, pristine glass. I blacked the gouge with india ink, and in general use I can see no issues from the "bad" lens - however, if I set up a test using both lenses, the gouge becomes very apparent.This comment is on topic because it pertains to the lenses that a thread-mount Leica user will come across. I always wonder why the ePrey sellers of old lenses even add this inane platitude to their listings.
1. A sophisticated buyer will not pay any attention to a stupid comment like this.
2. An uninformed or new camera buyer will be looking for 50+ year-old lenses??
3. The sellers almost never show actual photographs taken with the exact lens or camera, so how do they know it has no effect?
4. If the haze does have an optical effect, the sellers have made themselves vulnerable for a PayPal claim for money back.
It must be feel-good crap for camera/lens sellers - not for the benefit of the customers.
Better is "shutter sounds accurate at all speeds".I am quite sure we could amass a very long list of the stupid shit that eBay sellers say about cameras and lenses.
one of my favorites is: "an easy fix"
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