Hi Mark
and how would you explain a little girl that she can't instantly review the
photo you took of her.
Yesterday, I showed the film capsule and told her that I have to send it to
the labs for the prints because it is an old camera but she didn't
understand  :-)

I know what you mean with the "delayed gratification", usually I bring films
on Monday for development and have them back Friday.
It's a special moment to open the envelope :-)
greetings
Markus


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
Mark Erickson
Sent: Monday, January 15, 2007 5:57 PM
To: pdml
Subject: OT: the magic of film and old cameras


Last week I finished a roll that had lived in my Voigtlander Vitessa for
more than a year.  I took it for processing over the weekend and had fun
parsing through the results.  Compared to my *ist-Ds, the delayed
gratification is both maddening and fun!  It's a little magical to break out
the prints and see what came of your efforts.

By the way, if you want the best deal in a 1950's rangefinder, the Vitessa
is it.  It feels like it was carved from a single chunk of metal, has pretty
good ergonomics for an old camera, and the 50mm f/3.5 Skopar lens on mine
produces very sharp pictures.  They say the f/2.0 Ultron is even better--as
good as or better than the contemporary Summicrons.  Vitessas seem to go for
between $100 and $200 if they're really clean.  That's a lot less than, say,
a Leica iiiF with a 50mm f/3.5 Elmar.

 --Mark

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