Home | Login | Register
10 Years of PhotographyREVIEW.com!
Camera reviews, digital camera reviews, and photography community

REVIEWS:  Cameras:  Film Cameras:  Rangefinders:
35

More Products from Rollei
Link to this page

Rollei 35


 
Sort by Latest Review >> |  Sort by Best Rating >> |  Sort by Worst Rating >> |  View All >>
Next 5 Reviews >>
Rating
Reviewed by: 

truando

( Expert)

Review Date
April 18, 2005

Overall Rating
 3 of 5

Value Rating
 3 of 5

Used product for
3 Months to 1 year

Visitors rate this review
2.00 of 5,
13 votes

Rate this review?

Review 1 of 37

Price Paid:  $100.00 from eBay

Summary:

I bought two 35 SE with the Sonnar 40mm f2.8 lens after reading the reviews on this page. The pictures looked OK until I compared them with my Leica M6 ones - then they faded into insignificance. What a disappointment! They looked dull and boring, while the Leica ones jumped off the lightbox. I will sell my Rolleis as soon as possible. I bought myself a Mamiya 7 II instead, that should help me get the quality I'm looking for.

Strengths:

Size, weight, cheap to get

Weaknesses:

batteries, focussing, image quality

Similar Products Used:

Leica M6



Would you like to Comment?
Join PhotographyReview for a free account, or Login if you are already a member.
Rating
Reviewed by: 

pastor1045

( Expert)

Review Date
August 4, 2004

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
5.00 of 5,
1 votes

Rate this review?

Review 2 of 37

Price Paid:  $250.00 from ebay

Summary:

I have been using this camer for about 5 years now. I take it with me when I go hiking. I have consistenly produced unbelievable images. The camera is sturdy, the meter is accurate and the lens is one of the best ever. Using ISO 400 speed film helps to reduce and errors metering or focusing, since you can shoot at higher fstops and the film has a high latitude. Learn how to use hyperfocal distances and it will become second nature. Black and white shots come out great. This camera is silent in operation and best suited for shots you can take your time with: Landscapes, portraits of friends, etc. I have a Nikon 90s and several lenses from 24mm to 300mm, but this is the camera I most enjoy using!

Strengths:

Compact size, easy to use-- if you understand photography

Weaknesses:

None, if you are willing to underastand its quirks!

Similar Products Used:

Rollei 35 AFM

Customer Service:

Harry Fleenor at harry@rolleirepairs.com can do just about anything you seed



Would you like to Comment?
Join PhotographyReview for a free account, or Login if you are already a member.
Rating
Reviewed by: 

Cadenza

( Intermediate)

Review Date
June 19, 2004

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 4 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Rate this review?

Review 3 of 37

Price Paid:  $175.00 from eBay

Summary:

The Rollei 35 is the first compact camera. It is NOT a Point-n-Shooter in the modern sense. Designed some 3 decades ago, the Rollei 35 is ALL manual and forces the user to think through the steps of taking a picture. Like all things that attained cult status, it combined quirkiness with leading edge technology of its time. As already complimented by many, Zeiss glass can do no wrong! Mine is a 35S with the f/2.8 Sonnar and I love the photos this baby makes. The contrast, color, sharpness and saturation from this Sonnar can blow many modern lenses right out of the water. I'm so hooked on Zeiss that I got another compact P/S - the Contax T3 - which also came with a Sonnar lens. Woohoo!!! One loaded with color film and the other with B&W, they're fun, convenient and capable shooters for my backpacking trips or any occasion. Use pro films and a reliable lab and you'll be continuously impressed with the quality results. Now to its quirks... Hotshoe at the bottom can be a pain. Rollei has an accessory bracket to make things easier. Zone-focusing requires some practice, but with the DOF scale and manual aperture, it shouldn't take too long. The exposure meter is on the top while the shutter and aperture dials are on the front. To those who don't get it, they slam this arrangement as an ergonomic disaster. Listen up: the idea is to adjust the shutter, aperture and focus with the camera at the chest level. Once everything is set, raise the camera to eye-level. Frame the scene and CLICK!

Strengths:

- Lens! Lens! Lens! - Small size - Rugged construction - Flash sync up to 1/500" - All mechanical (except meter) - ISO & Aperture dials have 1/3 increments - Lens accepts filter & hood

Weaknesses:

- Hotshoe at the bottom - ISO dial stiff to adjust - CdS meter requires calibration for 1.5V - Service & Repair not easy to find - Shutter mechanism needs regular exercise

Similar Products Used:

Contax T3, Contax G1, Minolta M5

Customer Service:

No need yet...



Would you like to Comment?
Join PhotographyReview for a free account, or Login if you are already a member.
Rating
Reviewed by: Paul Johnson
 (Casual)

Review Date
January 30, 2004

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
1.00 of 5,
1 votes

Rate this review?

Review 4 of 37

Price Paid:  $75.00 from friend in 1975 or so

Summary:

The Rollei has been in my pocket since the mid 1970s, and taken untold rolls of film. The fact that it is always with me means I get many shots that one would often miss. As a motorcyclist, it is very easy to carry in a jacket pocket, and as a frequent business traveller, it is easy to drop in a briefcase.

Strengths:

The amazing build quality that so many have commented on is there. The batteries last forever; think I've replaced it twice. Key is in keeping light off the meter except when using. It bounces well on the sidewalk.

Weaknesses:

beats me! Oh, maybe that I've gotten used to the auto stuff and often forget to focus.

Similar Products Used:

Leica Minilux. Now I keep b/w in the Rollei and color in the Leica.

Customer Service:

Have only ever had to fix it once, after a really nasty sidewalk drop. That time the shutter speed knob broke, and I was down for several years before the Internet found me a repair shop (hence the Minilux)



Would you like to Comment?
Join PhotographyReview for a free account, or Login if you are already a member.
Rating
Reviewed by: Daniel Kin kwong CHAN
 (Professional)

Review Date
October 19, 2003

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
1 to 3 months

Visitors rate this review
3.17 of 5,
6 votes

Rate this review?

Review 5 of 37

Price Paid:  $0.00

Summary:

The new version of Rollei Sonnar 40mm f2.8 lens is superb. The quality of lens is excellent, better than Leica's 35mm lens,i.e. the combination of both Contax and Leica lens' quality. You do agree with me after you have owned one!

Strengths:

The HFT coating is the most important factor in tackling "sun-flare" situation.

Weaknesses:

Nothing

Similar Products Used:

Leica lenses

Customer Service:

No comment



Would you like to Comment?
Join PhotographyReview for a free account, or Login if you are already a member.
| Next 5 Reviews >>

Latest Pro Reviews:
Camera News:
2009 PMA Tradeshow Coverage
2009 PMA Coverage
March 3-5
Get Newsletter!
Enter e-mail address for PhotographyREVIEW
newsletter

 MtbREVIEW.com  RoadbikeREVIEW.com  OutdoorREVIEW.com
 PhotographyREVIEW.com  VideogameREVIEW.com  ComputingREVIEW.com
 AudioREVIEW.com  CarREVIEW.com  GolfREVIEW.com

Copyright ©1996-2009 All Rights Reserved.ConsumerREVIEW.com, a business unit of Invenda