Zenobia C-II
Posted: Fri Apr 24, 2015 7:02 pm
Found this one just the other day in an antique store. And it didn’t have an antique price on it!
The second generation of Daiichi Optical Company’s (DOC) copy of the Zeiss Ikonta A, it has a 3.5/75 Neo-Hesper (Tessar type) lens in a Daiichi-Rapid shutter (exact copy of the Compur-rapid). Improvements are a new top plate that incorporates the finder in a solid housing, accessory shoe, DOF calculator, winding knob, and shutter release with cable socket.
I put a roll of Fujicolor Pro 160 NS in it, added a Kodak 32mm push-on hood, and hit the road (south on US-11 to be exact). I really guessed wrong as to what shutter speed to use, and went too slow at 1/100. Should have used 1/250, and opened the aperture a slight bit. Even though the 1 sec speed is fine, the higher ones could still be a bit slow. So, after getting the scans back, I spent the afternoon fixing exposures and color. The lens handles flare pretty well, and the controls are all in the right places. Except for that left handed shutter release. It’s not wrong, it’s just left. Didn’t take much to get used to.
You can read about the Zenobia cameras here in better detail:
http://camera-wiki.org/wiki/Zenobia
Now I have to see if I can find some 32mm push-on filters.
Zenobia C-II Front by br1078phot, on Flickr
Side-By-Side Zenobia-Ikomat 1 by br1078phot, on Flickr
Quiet Course by br1078phot, on Flickr
Church In Springtime by br1078phot, on Flickr
Plum Creek Makeover by br1078phot, on Flickr
Silent Cannon by br1078phot, on Flickr
Walking The Carolina Road by br1078phot, on Flickr
See more at:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/7699588@N ... 155388101/
PF
The second generation of Daiichi Optical Company’s (DOC) copy of the Zeiss Ikonta A, it has a 3.5/75 Neo-Hesper (Tessar type) lens in a Daiichi-Rapid shutter (exact copy of the Compur-rapid). Improvements are a new top plate that incorporates the finder in a solid housing, accessory shoe, DOF calculator, winding knob, and shutter release with cable socket.
I put a roll of Fujicolor Pro 160 NS in it, added a Kodak 32mm push-on hood, and hit the road (south on US-11 to be exact). I really guessed wrong as to what shutter speed to use, and went too slow at 1/100. Should have used 1/250, and opened the aperture a slight bit. Even though the 1 sec speed is fine, the higher ones could still be a bit slow. So, after getting the scans back, I spent the afternoon fixing exposures and color. The lens handles flare pretty well, and the controls are all in the right places. Except for that left handed shutter release. It’s not wrong, it’s just left. Didn’t take much to get used to.
You can read about the Zenobia cameras here in better detail:
http://camera-wiki.org/wiki/Zenobia
Now I have to see if I can find some 32mm push-on filters.
Zenobia C-II Front by br1078phot, on Flickr
Side-By-Side Zenobia-Ikomat 1 by br1078phot, on Flickr
Quiet Course by br1078phot, on Flickr
Church In Springtime by br1078phot, on Flickr
Plum Creek Makeover by br1078phot, on Flickr
Silent Cannon by br1078phot, on Flickr
Walking The Carolina Road by br1078phot, on Flickr
See more at:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/7699588@N ... 155388101/
PF