Agfa Silette
Agfa used to make
cameras, and this is one
of 'em. It's a sweet little
35mm viewfinder
job with a bright line finder.
"Viewfinder"
means there is no mechanical device
on the
camera to help the user with
accurate focus.
You take your best guess and set it
on the
lens. Understanding depth of
field helps a lot.
The camera above is shown with a
yellow filter
(I shoot mostly black and white),
and a neat
little Sekonic Twinmate light
meter. If you
are not good at estimating exposure
on dull
days (like me) these are really
handy.
Just Enough;
The
lens is just fast enough, and just sharp
enough, for me at least.
It's no Nikkor, but it
does a respectable job. It has a simple
shutter,
with speeds from 1/30 to a just fast enough 1/250,
plus "B"
for long exposures. Minimum aperture
is f22, which is just small
enough for asa 400 film
on sunny days. The little red knob is the
self timer and the flash sync is on the left.
It will sync at all
speeds.
It has an accy shoe, but it's not
"hot". The film counter is at
the bottom.
The rewind knob on the left pulls up so you can get a
better grip to use it.
The shutter button on the right is
threaded for a cable release.
There's a sticker inside the back plate
admonishing the owner to use
Agfa Isopan film.
I couldn't find a single roll of Isopan at the local drugstore.
I guess they were out
of it. So, I figured APX 400 should be close enough.
Hey, it's still Agfa film, so
it shouldn't hurt the camera,
right?
I shot a roll and developed it in Gainer's PC-TEA formula.
Negs were printed on Agfa MC Premium
RC paper.
As is my wont, I shot another barn, and
this
time I got a big-un.
Everything's about
snow in these parts this time of
year.
The marquee for the old Blue Fox theater.
I just love everything
about this old place.
Guess that's why I keep coming
back to
it.
The sky is white here because it was white
when I took the
photo. Clouds.
And the ticket box at the Fox.
I love a place with a nice painted
glass door.
Great name for a
bakery eh?
We see a lot of this here on
the
prairie.
I've seen it where there has been a sprinkler left on
over a freezing night, but this is au natural.
Ma Nature did it without any help
Looks kind of like fuzzy frosting.
Called hoar frost, I'm told.