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Pentax have finally taken the cover off of their film camera project. Interesting but I am disappointed it's a half frame.
View: https://youtu.be/QGzvthi-ZwE?si=mM51t45xjXpwS0ef
The more I think about it the more I don't know who this is aimed at. If it's aimed at new film photographer's then why choose one of the hardest things to learn, zone focusing.
I'm still tempted though
Exciting. I hope you love it.Mine arrives tomorrow apparently.
I just made a first impressions video if you'd like to see it in some degree of close up.
View: https://youtu.be/Cb5fxi0VD60
I think you could be on to something there. There is scope to convert it to full frame, by the look of it. How much that is part of Pentax's strategy I suppose only time will tell.
Mine does not have the Dallmeyer lens, it has the Wray lens which is f/3.5 - it does however have the flash sync sockets. And has a case with a set of colour filters to fit the lens.For a little perspective, the Ilford Advocate was £15 15s at launch in 1950, plus £6 16s. 6d. purchase tax - £22.58 total in decimal
The Bank of England inflation calculator pegs that at about £650 in 2024 money.
Another popular example of a small fixed lens camera, the Olympus XA was US $200 at launch in 1979, which is about $865 today
From everything I have seen of this camera, it is a platform for future development. My first thought upon seeing the back was the same - it's set up for easy conversion to full frame in a future model.
I understand the zone focus is actuated electronically, not a mechanical link (which also explains the small delay talked about in the video after turning the camera on). That makes it very simple to add autofocus in a later version.
Ricoh, who own Pentax, already sell the Ricoh GRIII and GRIIIx cameras, which are often compared as alternatives to the X100 range.I think Pentax would have been better advised to create something digital to compete with the Fuji X100V. Factor in the cost of shooting film and the delayed results from it..... it's a brave move.
Absolutely. But there may be a balance to be struck, as ever - between marketing adventures, and true social function ...Sure, you can buy better specced used cameras for less, but this not only gives the intended market the opportunity to buy something brand new, but also has the potential if its a success to lead to better cameras in the future and maybe even spur other manufacturers to do similar things.
Been there myself. Bought a small compact as a take everywhere camera and lost it almost straight away. My wife now refers to it as her cameraI have obviously lost the camera before even having a chance to use it myself!!
I do not understand the appeal. There is a wide range of far better second hand film cameras easily available.
Who needs to buy?But will they work when you receive them? If there's a shop nearby where you can inspect the cameras and if you know what to check and how that's a good option but for some people the lottery that buying used on line can be might make buying new more attractive.
I don't think I'm overly fussy but a significant percentage of my photography related used buys from on line market places have been bad. I suppose buying used online from an established and honest online shop is a safer bet than buying from some individual you don't know.
Who needs to buy?
Personally I'd go for an old one every time. A good solid manual classic, maybe a Pentax LX, Nikon F3, Canon A1, Olympus OM1, something like that. A plastic half frame? Nahhhh.I think Pentax hopes someone will and if so one question is what? This new camera or an old one?
I have a couple of compacts. I still have my first camera, a Kodak 36 Instamatic, but I gather you can't get film for those anymore. I do have another compact which may be a Miranda or something like that and I think that does take ordinary 35mm film. I just might give that a go one day if it still works.
It seems to be hugely overpriced for what it is. £499 for zone focussing? Wouldn't you be better off with an Olympus trip, or some other vintage compact? Not that what people buy is always wholly subject to logic, of course. ;-)
Very true. What price being able to use it straight out of the box?Just received a Ricoh FF-1 yesterday. On paper, a nice Minox 35GT clone. It was one of those MINT A++++ jobs off Japan. I went through the ebay images with a fine comb. All looked good on paper. I pulled the trigger.
Camera gets here. It does look beautiful. I pop in a couple of SR44 batteries. Aaaand. Nope. Shutter doesn't fire. It's a brick. I'll have to go through the hassle of opening a case, hoping the seller is nice enough to deal with this fairly,I might have to upload videos and images etc. EVEN IF I manage to get my money back after the return, I will be stung by the customs+VAT fee probably.
Before that I tried an XA bought locally. Looked beautiful. Great glass, mechanics fine. I try a couple of test shots. Terrible results. Holga-like sharpness. I do some table tops sharpness tests. Left side is sharper than right. Something, somewhere, in the course of this camera's long life has gone wrong. Knocked over perhaps, and quickly dumped on the ebay.
And the above are just two of the many 'meh' used camera experiences I've had. Honestly, I'm tired of buying crappy, poorly described, misrepresented used cameras. At best you need to spend other 300 quid for a CLA. But good techs are disappearing. Newton & Ellis is no more. Camera repair is a crap shoot. If they accept to work on the camera, you'll have to wait for months to actually get it back and go take some bloody pictures.
Well I don't have time to wait, hope that a camera works, tinker with it on a workbench if it doesn't. People are busy. Jobs, kids.
Some people just want to click a button, place an order, get a wrapped, functioning, fresh product at their doorstep.There's a warranty, there are spare parts. There is no mould, rust, hazy viewfinder, sticky shutters etc. It's so refreshing. Those 500 quid are entirely justified. IMHO.
When my son's bought a digi compact for my wife.....she found it too confusing compared with a film compact, anyway she continued to use it just set for only point a shoot and ignored all the other controls/setups that you could use .Received today. It is very lightweight, rather like a plastic camera but does feel well made and solid despite that. Mostly intuitively easy to use, the film loading is easier and more reliable than the old grip and pull method with the leader. The winder is very positive. I've loaded a film and will wait to see what turns up after we';ve shot it (will be shared with my wife - she loves it and wants to keep it for herself!). There are some nice touches as observed in the reviews. It's great to have a new Pentax film camera.