Nikomat in Santa Monica

Recently, I went on a Classic analog photography walk. It seemed the time for the “Land Rover” of cameras, the vintage Nikomat, yes, the Japanese name, produced between 1965 and 1978. This is a heavy body (FT-N, 67-73) with lots of metal, yet very reliable and durable. Totally mechanic with few malfunctions that could not be repaired. The handling is similar to the Minolta SRT series. Here, I have used fresh Kodak TMax100.

On these walks, my eye is drawn to repeating patterns.
Lovely patina on the sign at Bergamot Station.
The beautiful construction inside Tongva Park.
The view focuses on the ocean immediately.
Good fences…

Berlin with a Voigtlander Vintage Camera

In mid-2023, I was able to travel to Berlin, taking with me the Voigtlander Perkeo II vintage film camera. This is a wonderful and impressive machine. The lens is excellent. Definitely a keeper.

Berlin Voigtlander Perkeo II
Kodak Gold 200 Unter den Linden
Looks like the 1930s.
Marx and Engels remain mute against the backdrop of Berlin’s catholic cathedral.
The Reichstag seen from the river.
Germany’s political headquarters are modern and a bit lifeless.
Berlin Dom Fuji Reala 100
Fuji Reala 100 Museum Island, James-Simon-Galerie. This is a new addition to the Museum island.
Alexander von Humboldt, Ukrainian Flag, Kodak Gold 200
City Hall and St. Mary’s Church, Kodak Gold 200
Volksbuehne Kodak Gold 200

Favorite Time of the Year

Days get shorter, lights go on. This is a great time to paint with the light, since the backdrop of the canvas is pitch black. So many opportunities: It is like you are given a new toy to explore your own environment. You are discovering a new way of seeing. What is happening in your neighborhood?Follow the direction of the light. Bend it, swirl it, draw a curve or a graph. Make the light dance. Use the zoom and have your light burst onto the scene, or have it travel way down there into the black hole.

Light flaring against a black bckground

Your imagination knows no boundaries. Move, twirl, rotate. The light is flexible, it will move along and etch its own path onto your sensor. Discover avenues of light your eyes are unable to capture.

See how the rays of light move like a spectacular color ocean in the night. Do they forms chains or strobes, walls or gates?

Steady your hand and start drawing and painting with the light sources in front of you.

Bouquet of light flowers
Ocean waves of light

Favorite Film Cameras: The Welta Weltini

This lovely folder was made in Freital in Saxony before the Second World War. Still fully functional, and a bit quirky. This copy comes with a Schneider-Kreuznach Xenar f/2.8 lens and speeds up to 1/500 sec.

Near Mechernich. Fuji 200.

Unusual ergonomics as the camera is in a way upside down. But it does fit nicely into your hand, and the movements become second nature very quickly. The mechanics resemble a fine watch.

Double exposure. Bonn. Kodak Pro Image 100.

I started searching for a Welta Weltini after reading Murray Leff’s book on his wartime experiences. Lens of an Infantryman – McFarland (mcfarlandbooks.com) An American GI, he participated in the campaign in Western Europe and documented parts of it on a German camera: the Welta. Officially it was forbidden for soldiers to carry cameras. Why? If a soldier was captured and the camera would fall into enemy hands, it might make identifying units easier and give the enemy clues about troop locations. But Leff cleverly placated his superior officers by taking pictures of them and giving them a print as a present. How did he find a darkroom in a battle zone? He waited for nightfall and poured developer into his helmet.

Leff does not reveal if he used a Weltini or a different model but I like to think he came across a decent copy of the Weltini and made his wartime photos with it. A quality Rangefinder camera, made in Saxony, between 1938 and 1941. You have to get used to the operation as it is a bit counterintuitive. But it sits really well in your hand and is a fun machine.

Along the Rhine river early in the morning. Kodak Pro Image 100.
Fritz Gruber Square (founder of Photokina), Cologne. Ultramax 400
Surreal advertising figures. Ultramax 400

Welta Weltini II (1938) – mike eckman dot com

Favorite Film Cameras: The Agfa Selectronic 3

Agfa is one of the storied companies of film. Most of the time, Agfa produced affordable consumer cameras to promote its extensive line of film. This particular SLR from the early 1980s is relatively rare and was designed by a famous German design company, Schlagheck & Schultes. The body is black, but it sports the trademark orange button. I also like that the Chinon-made camera has an easy-to-operate double exposure slider. The Agfa is very suitable for double or multiple exposure images and can operate with all Pentax lenses.

Schloss Augustusburg in Bruehl. Fuji 200.

I have been using a standard Pentax 50mm lens. The Agfa Selectronic 3 is the best of the three cameras made by Chinon for the German company. It is a rebadged Chinon CE-4. I enjoy the unusual design, especially since I was also able to get my hands on a vintage AGFA strap and appreciate the AGFA effort to offer something special with this camera.

Stairs. Fuji 200.
Hameln, Old Town. Fuji 200
Full bloom. Fuji 200
Double Exposure, Cologne Flora. Fuji 200
Triple Exposure, Euskirchen. Kodak 200.
Advertising, double exposure. Kodak 200
Street musicians. Kodak 200
Sunflower. Kodak Gold.
Kodak Gold.

Link https://mikeeckman.com/2022/03/agfa-selectronic-3-1980/

Favorite Film Cameras: The Agfa Optima sensor electronic 1035 (1976)

Bauhaus style?

Like all of these pieces, I am interested in the experience of using film cameras. I like to learn about the history they represent, the age in which they were made, the effort to make them competitive. I admire the workmanship that went into these small objects. Here we have a truly small object, the Agfa Optima sensor electronic 1035. Black. Plastic exterior. Compact shape. Design by Agfa’s go-to company Schlagheck Schultes, reminiscent of the iconic philosophy of Dieter Rams and Braun. 4-element Solitar S 40mm f 2.8 lens (multi-coated). 255 grams. Shutter speed 15 seconds to 1/1000 of a second.

Baroque Facade. (Kodak Pro Image 100)

Fantastic clear viewfinder. Classic Agfa Red-orange Sensor shutter button. Prize-winning camera. Something to wear. Reminiscent of a later design philosophy by a Cupertino company.

Steel cover of a pumping station (Kodak Pro Image 100)

Curious rewind system – the film advance lever becomes rewind lever. When I used this the first time, I was apprehensive – could this actually work? Would I not again spoil precious film? But no, everything worked out fine. Have confidence in the mechanics.

Splash of Color (Kodak Ultramax 400)

The exposed film is pushed into a light-safe chamber so that even if you open the back, your images are safe. A smart idea, and one of those that makes you wonder why it took decades for an engineer to think of it.

Storm along the Rhine river (Kodak Ultramax 400)
Raised tree branches in winter (Kodak Ultramax 400)

Made in Munich. You had to pay 298 DM at the time. What impresses me is the design philosophy, the ability to re-invent age-old mechanisms, the courage to offer bold solutions, and all of this in a neat small frame. Classic.

Bad Muenstereifel, detail. Kodak 200
Bad Muenstereifel before the flood. Kodak 200.
Bad Muenstereifel. Kodak 200.

Links:

https://www.edition-oldenburg.de/agfa_optima.html

Classic Berlin

Oberbaum Bridge
East Side Gallery
The TV Tower on Alexanderplatz
Friendly neighborhood
Jonathan Borowsky sculpture in the background. View from the Oberbaumbruecke

A brief stop in Berlin to survey the landscape and check out the photography stores. I visited fotoimpex, click&surr and, in a neighborhood shop selling laundry machines and other technical gear, managed to snag a perfectly working Kodak Retina IIa from the early 1950s. It was fun bargaining with the owner of the store! Great discovery. Renting a three-speed bike was definitely an experience, but also a wonderful way to get around and slow down.

Favorite Film Cameras: The Rikoh XR-7M (1989)

By the 1980s, the development of the SLR had advanced to produce solid cameras with a remarkable list of specs. Some companies lead the market by spending tons of money on commercials, magazine advertisements and endorsements, others sought to offer good value for money. Now that these bodies are affordable and collectable, it is fun to check out what different design concepts could achieve. The Rikoh XR-7M is one of the unsung heroes of the age.

Skinny parking garage. Kodak Pro Image 100.

Ricoh itself dates back to 1938. In the 1980s, their range of SLRs included beginner, advanced amateur and professional models. The XR-7M features aperture priority with full manual override. The shutter speeds range from 8 seconds to 1/2000. You can use any of the Pentax K-Mount lenses on this typical 1980s style camera body. It handles well and the body is sturdy and durable. Although constructed to last, it is lightweight and quite ergonomic to operate. What I like in particular is the easy multiple exposure switch and therefore the ability to produce in camera double, triple, and multiple exposures.

The Ricoh’s double exposure function tested with expired “Farbwelt 200” film.

Like many of these models, they get little love: They don’t have the cache of big brand names and often fly under the radar of collectors. Which makes it easier to acquire them at a decent price! I would recommend investing in a deal involving a few lenses and a bag, this will not set you back very much.

Overpass from below (Kodak Pro Image 100)

Bargain price, good ergonomics, and plenty of potential to experiment: now wonder I enjoy using the 1980s SLR’s! With demand and prices increasing, it is still fun to seek out affordable mechanical machinery from the “golden age”. However, some of the camera may soon reach their natural demise, so if you have them in your collection, take them out for a spin and enjoy them.

Ghostlike apparition (Agfa APX 400)
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The lenses (made in Japan) are suitably sharp. I like the film “look”, and I do think sharpness is overrated, just like bokeh. Although I like the testing of “new to me” camera, I also enjoy investing a bit more time in producing better images. It is indeed satisfying to experience the ability of these contraptions to capture an image at all, yet it gives me pleasure to add a little spice and push them to the limits. And although I do experiment with expired film, I think the best way to do the vintage cameras a service is to honor them with fresh film to bring out their full potential.

Layers (Fuji 200)

The Ricoh XR-7m is a great vintage SLR from the best age of SLR camera manufacturing. The company and this particular model seem to have been underrated throughout their life span. A real discovery. It is one of these camera bodies I have on my “grab and go” shelf – these are the no-nonsense, reliable film cameras that perform and do not get in the way. (I also have another shelf of “slow down” cameras – these are the mechanical masterpieces that have quirky features or unusual operations you have to keep in mind in the field – or look into the manual to find out about this mysterious switch).

Double vision (Farbwelt 200 expired)
Sculptural look (Agfa APX 400)

Link:

http://www.fotolaborinfo.de/foto/ricohkamera.htm#Ricoh_Kauf

On the Mirror’s Edge

When we change our perspective, we add another dimension to the world. The reflective mode mirrors the image in front of us. How do we perceive the world when it is upside down, on the side, or topsy-turvy? Photography is able to add a new way of seeing. Beyond the ordinary, the expected, the usual. Beyond the appearance. These square images represent a selection of attempts to change the angle of our vision. What do we see in these lines?

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More ICM positions

Capturing movement is a challenge since the beginning of photography. Engineers perfected the shutter mechanism over the decades, allowing the camera to freeze the action. However, sometimes the “frozen” nature of an image betrays the dynamic nature of events in front of our eyes. Moving the camera intentionally adds the element of surprise again, the image’s authenticity and integrity complements our way of seeing.

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