rmalarz wrote:
Jack, I've got the remaining amount of 100' of Delta 400 I'll be using in the very near future.
--Bob
Seems like putting anything other than Kodak film in it would be a sacrilege. (But I’m an ilford and Fuji fan myself)
GoofyNewfie wrote:
Seems like putting anything other than Kodak film in it would be a sacrilege. (But I’m an ilford and Fuji fan myself)
And so I think I would run a roll of Ektachrome thru mine when I got my rolls from B&H.
The Kodak Retina IIA was my first camera after I mastered the Kodak Box Camera. I bought it in 1950 for $125--a lot of money in those days. I used it exclusively until my Olympus OM2.
Now I have progressed to Digital.
Thank you for sharing this insightful and moving video. Well done to
Sigma to produce it for its artistic value.
rmalarz wrote:
Kodak Retina IIa
--Bob
Bob, They don't make them like that anymore.
Have fun with it.
Stan
rmalarz wrote:
Kodak Retina IIa
--Bob
Great rangefinder! Some people prefer it to the IIIC.
I have a IIIc (smaller viewfinder, rats!) and love it.
Folds small and takes great pictures. Since it was
bought new in 1959, it has never required any repairs.
I still shoot it sometimes.
For anyone who may not recall, these are German-made
Kodak cameras with Schneider lenses.
One thing that takes a little getting used to: like all the folding Retinas,
the film counter counts backwards: 36, 35, ..., 1.
Bipod wrote:
One thing that takes a little getting used to: like all the folding Retinas,
the film counter counts backwards: 36, 35, ..., 1.
And it stops shooting at 0.
That is one beautiful find and I ,too, love to collect older cameras. They were made so well and are works of art to me. I still play with them and love the noises they make from the shutters to the wind-up timing mechanisms that some have and they never need updates or batteries....who knew?
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