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The Vintage Camera Club Thread

rjb1

Practically Family
Messages
561
Location
Nashville
Lee - Let's see some photos of WWII stuff using that Speed Graphic.
Have you checked the serial number to find out date of manufacture? If not, check inside upper-right (facing the camera) of the camera body and see what it says. It's dark in there, so use a flashlight or good light.
I have a pretty good reference list if you get the number.
 

Vornholt

One of the Regulars
Messages
170
The "vintage look" is dependent on a number of things. What the camera will actually produce varies depending on the lens type and quality of the optics, among other things. The lens will (partially) determine the level of contrast and sharpness of the image. Variations on that will give a photo an appearance often defined as "vintage". Film type also figures into it, as does processing of the film, itself subject to a host of variables.

Some Leica lenses, particularly the oldest 50mm Summars, are prone to what photographers call the "Leica look". It relates to the coating, or lack thereof, on those old lenses. Sharpness, lens flare, the nature of the out of focus areas, all of that and more affect the end product and how we see it.
 

1930artdeco

Practically Family
Messages
673
Location
oakland
The film made today-I think they still make film right? Is better in a lot of ways than the film made in the 30-50's. But in other ways it is isn't. Look at original color film from the 30's and you will really vibrant colors and great shades of B&W in the B&W films. Today's films don't seem to have that. A lot of times it is the formula and the physical characteristics of the film and paper being used.

Mike
 

rjb1

Practically Family
Messages
561
Location
Nashville
From the late-30's through much more recent times a lot of the color images that still look great were taken on Kodachrome. That was the best-ever color film ( a lot of people think) both for color and sharpness. It was structurally and chemically different from the other color films, both then and now. I use the term "now" loosely since Kodachrome has been discontinued.
It took a centrally-located small-scale factory to process it - not a drugstore 1-hr operation.
We lost a means of preserving history when Kodachrome went away. None of the other processes have or had the image longevity of Kodachrome.

Some old cameras can take superb images that are as good as you could want, if they were originally well-built and well-maintained. Some, as mentioned with the old Leica Summars, are or can be almost worthless for picture taking today. (The two of those I have are so hazy that they can't be used at all.)
Film type and quality has a big effect also. The "worst" film you can buy today is better than the best from the old days. However, a lot of the old cameras had very large negatives (B&W). A large negative can make up for a lot of shortcomings in the film quality.
Back when I was teaching technical-photography as an engineering elective I would show the class a photo made using a 1908 Kodak and ask them what sort of camera they thought made it. They would always guess "Nikon" since the image was so sharp and clear. I would then show them the old bellows folding-Kodak and point out that it made a negative approx. 3 1/2 x 5 inches. (By modern terms it would have effectively a multi-jillion pixels.)
We'd go on from there to discuss all the multiple factors that went into determining the final image quality.
You could write a book on all this, and people have...

Another factor is who is doing the work. If you develop and print your own photos you will likely get better results than from the high-school-kid at Walgreens operating the film-processing machine while texting their BFF.
 

Carlo

New in Town
Messages
26
Location
Oregon
Carlo - Feel free to PM me with questions - this stuff is probably too arcane for this thread.

Regarding the ends of the Minox rolls... I've never bothered putting the taper and keyhole cut for the dev tank on the inner end: when developing, I just use a small piece of masking tape to attach the film to the start of the reel. (Crude, but effective!) When loading cassettes with fresh film, I use a hole punch to put a little quarter-moon at the start to indicate that it's unexposed (a la factory loads). But really, a strip of Minox film is just a plain strip... it's brilliant that Walter Zapp designed the Minox system so that the film is pulled through from an inner core gearing, with no need for tiny, hard-to-replicate sprocket holes!

I'm thrilled to see that Don Krehbiel's Minox site is still online. For info on building his slitter, see http://kcbx.net/~mhd/2photo/slitter/slit.htm

Blue Moon Camera in Portland Oregon is gearing up to produce Minox film. They gave me a pre-production cartridge to try out when I picked up several rolls of Minox film I drppoed off for processing.
Google Blue Moon Camera and Machine.

PS love your Speed Graphic P51. I also love all the other WWII paraphernalia in your photos.
I have a later model Speed Graphic that has a 120 roll film back in it. Never used it though.
 
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Luftwaffles

One of the Regulars
Messages
226
Location
South Carolina, US
Got two Brownie Bull's Eye cameras in working condition for $16.
cameras.jpg
 

esteban68

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,107
Location
Chesterfield, Derbyshire, England
Here's an old Photina twin lense reflex from the mid 50's I am told, It belonged to a relation who took it all over the world on a cruise in the later 50's and it has had little use since, condition is great apart from a bit of stitching needing re-doing on the case, it all appears to work ok.
20t1md0.jpg
30075fl.jpg

23six40.jpg
33de3xk.jpg

vik511.jpg
eti3k7.jpg
 

esteban68

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,107
Location
Chesterfield, Derbyshire, England
and a few more,
sc4ydl.jpg
15ywxo5.jpg


lenses are scratch free but do appear a little speckled, could it be the coating lifting, were they even coated?

mtxw1h.jpg
1232vti.jpg

It all seems clean inside and seals look in fine order.

and what's this, is it for a flash attachment?
n50aoi.jpg


is film still readily available and more to the point can you still get it developed in the UK?
 

rjb1

Practically Family
Messages
561
Location
Nashville
That looks to be a flash-cord connector/socket.
As for film, it probably uses 120 roll film. Here in the US it's available at large professional camera stores but not at Walmart or drug stores. It's readily available on-line.
Here you have to find a specialty-photo lab to develop it or (best idea) shoot black and white and develop it yourself.
Both of those statements are likely true for the UK, also.
 

LadyBaltimore

Familiar Face
Messages
60
Location
Baltimore
What a beauty, esteban68! I really would like to get into shooting 120 film, I know some great photographs that shoot on a Rolleiflex.

I have a 1950s Polaroid Land Camera, some much later model of a Polaroid camera I can't remember (but the kind I grew up with in the 1990s) and then I have three 35mm film cameras that I mostly shoot on, particularly the Pentax Spotmatic and Canon AE-1. I took the Spotmatic with me all across Asia one summer, it survived a lot, a fall down a ghat in Varanasi, India and a being sprinkled with some holy (super polluted) waters of the Ganges and doused with a hose by a well meaning sadu, and then being submerged in a bag of rice (and yes, the family at the little guest house gave me that, "Americans are crazy!" look when I requested rice for my uh…camera). Then the lens mysteriously fell off at the Monkey Temple in Kathmandu and I still had countries to go, so I kept shoving it back on precariously, the rest of the trip. I don't actually have a photo of my camera, but here's a couple of photos I shot with it, I'm a sucker for the look and feel of film, really can't be replicated with digital:

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People thought I was crazy relying on film to capture my memories, but I have no regrets.
 
Messages
15,083
Location
Buffalo, NY
Kodak Petite c.1930

There was an estate sale of a photographer's collection of vintage cameras in a suite near my office today... I was lucky to get out with only two. :eeek:

petit1.jpg


petit2.jpg


petit3.jpg


petit4.jpg
 
Messages
15,083
Location
Buffalo, NY
Cool link... thank you for sharing.

This photographer must have purchased every camera he came across - there were hundreds, perhaps over a thousand. The elite products were missing but there were a handful of Zeiss and Rollei cameras represented, and about every kind of mid century Kodak and 1960s Japanese SLR. A smaller number of Asian rangefinders.

The glut was terrifying to anyone with a collecting/hoarding gene. I actually went on the first day and walked away with nothing. Went back the second day and bargained a little with the 30% off prices. Today is the final day at 50% off. I might have to go back and have another look at one of the early Russian Leica copies... oy.
 

Fastuni

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,277
Location
Germany
Fleamarket find:

German Agfa "Isorette" from 1937 (it soon was renamed Isolette) known as the "soldiers camera".

Jsorette.jpg

Agfa423.jpg
 

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