Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/12/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]From: Jack Campin <jack@purr.demon.co.uk> Date: Fri, 6 Dec 1996 01:15:16 +0000 [ should be on the old-low-tech-rangefinders list, but as there isn't one... ] I've spotted a camera new to me in a junk shop here: an Olympus-S. ... Anyone out there know about these? I've heard the RD was good, and this seems very similar to descriptions I've read of them. I know a lot about using these! -- the very first camera I ever bought, with the money from my paper route, was an Olympus S. Used, for $27. I had been using my father's rangefinder-less Kodak Retinette, without even a handheld meter, guesstimating exposure. This was dicey as I liked to shoot transparencies even then, and I thought the Olympus with its built-in meter and rangefinder was just the bee's knees. That was a long time ago -- I'm in my thirties now -- and I still have the Olympus. I used it like the teenager I was -- dropped it, got it wet, dragged it all over the ass end of nowhere; and I grew up in the tropics, where the phrase "the ass end of nowhere" really carries some meaning. I ran a lot of film through it taking pictures for the school yearbook three years running, and it still works (well, it could use a CLA and the pot for the meter has corroded so the needle jumps all over the place). I looked at some of the transparencies last year and found them sharp, but much warmer than I like now that I use Leicas. I also found that the lens suffered pretty badly from flare, although I kind of liked that at the time for the "artistic" effect. What I really wanted, though, was one of those Leicas I would go look at most every afternoon at the used camera store next door to the school. Interchangeable lenses! I could have gotten a telephoto and taken candid portraits from across a classroom. Now that would have been living!