It is true that I have a few cameras and since I have a day off today, I decide to take pictures of them (well ...some of them anyway) because I am sorting out my carryon for an upcoming trip to Beijing. I could probably do it with a single camera and a lens, but where would be the fun in that?
I got a couple of new straps as well from
gordy's camera straps a few months ago, so I wanted to take some pictures to post to
his Flickr group so I put the little tags on for some of them. They are great wrist straps and not prohibitively expensive either.
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This is my Leica M8 (digital) with a collapsible 50mm Summicron. The lens has some edge separation, but because the M8 is a crop sensor camera. it is not visible in the frame, so they are a good match for each other. |
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This is my Fuji X100 (also digital). it has a non removable lens, but it takes great pictures and has autofocus and video capabilities as well. |
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This is a Leica M3 (film) and it is a fully manual camera (no battery or nuthin') and will function no matter how cold it gets (unless it is so cold that Kevin stops functioning) |
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This lens is a Voigtlander Nokton 40mm with a fast 1.4 maximum aperture. Very sharp lens and great in low light! |
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This is my other M8 (Digital) and it was the camera that quit on me in Istanbul. It went back to Leica and $400 later its back in shape. It's, in fact, the first Leica M that I ever owned, but produced long after the film ones! |
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this is my leica M3 (film) with a rigid (non- collapsible) 50mm Summicron lens. The leather on it is not original, but was on it when I bought it. the camera also has a previous owner's name inscribed on the back.It's a shame to carve your name in such a beautiful camera, but I guess if you own it, you can do what you please (I added a cool strap!) |
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This is my Leica M4 (film) it is in nearly perfect shape and is also a fully manual camera, so no battery and no meter. I guess it helps to know what you are doing, huh? ( I use a separate meter, actually!) |
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The lens is a 15mm Voigtlander ultra wide angle lens. it is so wide that you need a separate finder on top of the camera to see the field of view that the lens captures! |
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Here are all my Leica M's together! |
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Here is my Nikon FM3A (film), a manual camera but it has a meter and aperture priority mode |
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and here it is with my Nikon FM2N which has no aperture priority mode, just a light meter and works just fine without a battery (except for the meter) |
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I load my bag by putting in the leica's first (the lenses are in the blue case on the side) |
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then the Nikon go in next.... |
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and the Fuji X100 goes on top! |
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