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...
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