Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/03/10

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Subject: Re: [Leica] OT Help me identify this camera
From: Ernest Nitka <enitka@twcny.rr.com>
Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 13:01:52 -0500
References: <200303101236.EAA05006@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us>

Yes - it's amazing what crude tools were used back then :)

I recently got out my Petri, uncoupled RF folding 645 camera.  Out of the 
15 exposures most were ok with exposure , 14 were in some state of 
unfocused but the one taken of my dog in the middle of running around was 
PERFECT.  Not bad I'd say.

ernie


At 09:03 AM 3/10/03 -0800, you wrote:
>Karen Nakamura wrote:
> > For a picture of the Bolsey, see here:
> > http://www.photoethnography.com/ClassicCameras/BolseyC22.html
>
>Ernie, Karen:
>
>You've just thrown me into the throes of nostalgia.  My mother's camera
>was a Bolsey B2, which is essentially the camera shown, but without the
>TLR viewfinder grafted on top:
>
>http://www.pacificrimcamera.com/images/56489.jpg
>
>Mom still has the camera, although she no longer uses it, and I don't
>know if it still works. I have perfectly-preserved old Kodachromes of my
>folks taken with that Bolsey before I was born.  All of our family
>pictures came from that camera, until I took up photography about 1969 and
>discovered Leicas.  So I could say that the old Bolsey was what sparked
>my interest in photography.
>
>The Bolsey has a strictly split-image rangefinder rather than the
>coincidence type we're used to.  My mom would always ask one of us to
>stick a finger in the air so she could focus.
>
>(NO, not THAT finger. . .)   ;-)
>
>--Peter Klein
>Seattle, WA
>
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