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For the first black-and-white film with my new camera Pentax 17 (see below for the details about the camera), I loaded a special film given to me as a gift by « Ateliers de Marinette », Lyon, France. The film was spooled for 30-exposures (60 expected for the Pentax 17 that a half-frame camera) and is a bulk Ilford PanF Plus expire in 2005. The film is however well conserved and it could shot for the original 50 ISO sensitivity.
The Pentax 17 was equipped with an Anti-UV 40.5mm Hoya HMC filter. For the camera transportation, I used a small camera bag ThinkTank « Mirrorless Mover 5 » that was well protecting the camera from possibly damaging vibrations when using my bicycles.
The expositions were automatically metered by the camera system using the « P » program modes with, or without, flash. For very bright scenes the exposition was corrected by +0.3 to +1EV to compensate the biais induced (and reversely -0.3 to 0.7 EV for very dark scenes to objects).
Grandes Serres Tropicales, April 17, 2025
Jardin Botanique de Lyon
Parc de la Tête d'Or
69006 Lyon
France.
After completion the film was processed according the Marinette advice in Adox Adonal developer at 1+25 dilution for 7min at 20°C.
Single-frame digitizing was made using a Sony A7 camera (ILCE-7, 24MP) fitted to a Minolta Auto Bellows III with the Minolta slide duplication accessory and Minolta Macro Bellow lens 1:3.5 f=50mm at approximate reproduction ratio of 1:2. The diffuse light source was a LED panel CineStill Cine-lite.
The RAW files obtained were inverted within the latest version available of Adobe Lightroom Classic (version 14.2) and edited to the final jpeg pictures without intermediate file. They are presented either as printer files with a frame or the full size JPEG's together with some documentary smartphone color pictures.
About the camera :
Since last Christmas, it was on display in the middle of « reusable » cheap camera’s in the window of my local photography store. But this camera is not cheap and sold at 10-times the price of those « reusable » film camera’s. The Pentax 17 is a novel film camera released by Pentax (a brand belonging to Ricoh Imaging, Japan) in June 2024.
The history of « Pentax » name is still something worth to mention. After the WWII, in Dresden (that was heavily destroyed by the bombing of Feb. 13-15, 1945), Germany, The Zeiss Ikon company could not produce anymore the legendary original Contax (a high-reputation professional range-finder 35mm released in 30’s) camera that was taken by Russia and transferred to Kiev, Ukraine, in the USSR. However the brand name Contax survived and the German engineers designed something completely new within several years : the Contax S (S for « Spiegel mirror reflex ») that integrated a pentaprism for a full redressed reflex viewer observation. Zeiss Ikon Dresden registered to new trademarks derived from the words « Pentaprism » and « Contax » that were « Pentax » and « Pentacon ». If Pentacon became the new name of the company in Dresden, the trademark Pentax was bought by Asahi Optical Company in Japan, and became a formidable industrial and commercial success. Asahi Pentax, then Pentax alone, produced amazing quality camera’s including the legendary « Spotmatic » (a 35mm SLR) and stunning medium-format camera’s heavily used by professional photographers. Many of these camera’s of the past century are still operative and appreciated by film photography enthusiast’s.
Production of film camera’s vanished progressively in the mid 2000’s, as digital camera’s became of better quality and finally of generalized appliances in photography. The Pentax 17 was introduced to the market in June 2024, it was a big surprise for all the film photography lovers. Seeing a newly engineered brand-new film camera was a sort of renaissance of the film photography today of a growing interest worldwide.
The camera is a « half-frame » format on the traditional double-perforated 35mm film giving 17x24mm photograms. This format was not as popular as to classical 24x36mm (full-frame) format of most of the 35mm camera’s. However famous and quality half-frame camera’s were produced in the past including, the long series of Olympus Pen for example. Then, the Pentax 17 immediately attracted the attention of experimented film photographers and camera collectors, probably more than the officially targeted customers of the younger generations. Less than a year after, the future of the Pentax 17 and the film photography project of Pentax is questioned today. The chef-engineer who conducted the project in Ricoh company recently left and the marketing of Pentax 17 is now a question.
This finally decided me to buy an exemplary from my local shop and to discover this strange machine. The camera is of course guaranteed, even with a there-year extension after the camera registration on the Pentax website. The whole ergonomic is clearly derived from classical past 35mm camera’s with a fully mechanical film advance and rewind, a collimated Albada viewer, no digital display at all, only levers, barrels, crank and wheels… However inside is a automatic electronic exposure system with flash, the focusing is manual but the electronic mechanism moves the whole optical group with a micro motor.
The lens is a Cooke triplet 1:3.5 f=25mm equivalent to a 37mm of a 24x36mm format. The Cooke triplet is a photographic lens designed and patented in 1893 by Dennis Taylor who was employed as chief engineer by T. Cooke & Sons of York. It was the first lens system that allowed the elimination of most of the optical distortion or aberration at the outer edge of the image. It likely for this reason that the lens is unscripted curiously « Traditional » on the front lens ring… It is known that a Cooke triplet lens could give surprisingly good results with only three separated optical elements. The Cooke Triplet is still widely used in inexpensive cameras, including variations using aspheric elements, particularly in cell-phone cameras. The Cooke triplet consists of three separated lenses positioned at the finite distance. It is often considered that the triplet is one of the most important discoveries in the field of photographic objectives
The lens receives 40.5mm diameter thread filters that I use for my Zorki / Leningrad lenses Jupiter-8 2/50mm, Jupiter-11 4/135mm and Jupiter-12 2.8/35mm. The metal shade hood Minolta D42KA could mounted on the filter but I have to check is there is vignette induced.
The camera size is close to the original dimensions of a thread-mount Leica (called also the original Barnack Leica) which are, in a way, a sort of « Gold » size in the 35mm camera’s. I compared with my Zorki 1D year 1954 that is a straight reproduction of the Leica Iic. The upper deck of Pentax 17 is designed very clearly as a classical 35mm and we even find the original logo of Asahi Optical Company. The rewind crank is also a revival of past design seen on old Pentax SLR as my year-1971 Spotmatic SP in this seres of pictures.
The Pentax 17 is very light (about 300g) compared to those old ancestors that weight easily the double or the triple. It is then an effortless camera to carry. The Pentax 17 fits in the small ThinkTank bag (called « Mirorless Mover 5 ») that I recently bought to safely carry a film back of my Hasselblad or my Bronica 6X6 camera’s. In this tiny bag, the camera is protected for the element and vibrations due to cycling for instance.
Reference
analoguewonderland.co.uk/blogs/film-photography-blog/pent...
Key features and specifications
* Half-frame image capture (17 x 24mm)
* 37mm (equiv.) FOV F3.5 lens
* Zone focusing system with 6 zones
* Circular leaf shutter (F3.5-16)
* Built-in flash (6m/20ft at ISO100)
* Optical tunnel viewfinder with frame lines
* Exposure from 1/350 sec to 4 sec (+ Bulb)
* Supports films from ISO 50 to ISO 3200
Specifically the lens has:
1. HD coating, which maintains high performance of the lens, by using this PENTAX multi-coating. This also enables high contrast and high definition right to the edges.
2. SP coating (Super Protect) which helps to repel water and oil from the lens.
The fact that the focusing on the Pentax 17 is electronic i.e. the lens only moves when you half-press the shutter gives me faith that autofocus was already considered in the R&D stage.
From back of photo: "Ted W. and Lydia. July 4, 1976."
Theodore (Ted) B. Warrington, 1898-1990
Lydia Gleeson Warrington, 1899-1988
87997484 :Piction ID--Tanks, structures, and other equipment---Please tag these photos so information can be recorded.---- Digitization of this image made possible by a grant from NEH: NEH and the San Diego Air and Space Museum
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0
Leica M3 | Carl Zeiss Planar T* 50mm f/2 ZM | Tri-X 400
Digitized with Epson Vuescan V550 + Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0 | Lomography
Ilford DDX
From back of photo: "Florence DeHart. Dolly DeHart. 1943."
Ernestine (Dolly) DeHart Renaud, 1935-2024
Florence L. DeHart Burns, 1934-
The iPhone during dissassembly. At this point the digitizer assembly has been freed from the main body of the phone.
88858536 :Piction ID--Machinery---Please tag these photos so information can be recorded.---- Digitization of this image made possible by a grant from NEH: NEH and the San Diego Air and Space Museum
From back of photo: "Florence DeHart, Grandma Gleeson. At Grandma's home. Woodbury, N.J. 1944."
Florence L. DeHart Burns, 1934-
Lydia P. Eastlack Gleeson, 1872-1953
From back of photo: "Emma G. DeHart. Florence B. Gleeson. Sept. 1975."
Emma Campbell Gleeson DeHart, 1904-1995
Florence (Ted) Budd Gleeson, 1901-1980
For the Christmas Day, I decided to do a second film with my Contax F during a photo walk at Parc de la Tête d'Or, Lyon, France.
The Contax F was equipped of the Carl Zeiss Jean Tessar normal lens 2.8/50 with an aluminum 42mm push-on FOCA (France) shade hood with filter indicated bellow. The camera was loaded with a film Rollei Retro 400S (former aerial Agfa Aviphot 400) a super-panchromatic black-and-white film sensitized to 760nm in the near infra-red. The emulsion is coated on a clear PET film leading usually to high-contrast negative views. The film is quite adapted to low-light or misty weather. Exposures were determined using a Minolta Autometer III Minolta light meter (400 ISO normally and 125 ISO with the FOCA DYMA filter x3.5) fitted with a 10° finder for selective measurements privileging the shadow areas. The outdoor views were done at 1/200s or 1/100s typically at f/8. Indoor, I used the 1/50s from the full aperture f/2.8 ti about f/4.
December 25, 2023
69006 Lyon
France
After completion, the film was revealed using Adox Adonal developper at dilution 1+25at 20°C for 10min30 The film was then digitized using a Sony A7 body fitted to a Minolta Slide Duplicator installed on a Minolta Auto Bellows III with a lens Minolta Bellow Macro Rokkor 50mm f/3.5. The RAW files obtained were processed without intermediate files in LR and edited to the final jpeg pictures.
All views of the film are presented in the dedicated album either in the printed framed versions and unframed full-size jpeg. For this second film, no problems were noticed from the views with the shutter operation. I reinforced the light seals near the back locker where a suspicious small possible leak was noticed on the first test film. The leak is now highly reduced or absent now.
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About the camera and its normal lens:
The VEB Pentacon Dresden company was the name chosen in the 50's for the suite of Zeiss Ikon Dresden after the WWII in the former Deutsche Demokratische Republik (DDR).
Looking for a matching Carl Zeiss Jena Tessar lens for my Pentacon (Contax D), I found for the same low price a combo with later Contax F (1957) in working condition. The camera has the Ernemann tower logo but is branded "Contax". The Contax F is a small improvement of previous "Spiegel Contax" including a Fresnel lens to improve the viewing screen plus a system to automatically close the iris by pressing the shutter release. Both Zeiss Ikon and Contax brands were contested to the Zeiss branch on the other side of the west-east internal German border.
To avoid legal problems for exportation, Zeiss Ikon Dresden deposited two new possible trade marks resulting from the contraction of the words "Pentaprism" + "Contax" giving "Pentacon" and "Pentax". The name of Pentax was sold to Asahi Opticals in 1956 and the SLR Contax continued its distribution either under the name "Contax" for the internal East market, and "Pentacon" for export.
A new logo symbolizing the Ernemann tower of the Dresden Zeiss Ikon factory. For a time the "ZI" initials were included in the logo before disappearing later.
The M42 lens, branded "Carl Zeiss Jena", is a mid 50's Tessar 1:2.8 f=50mm, is in perfect mechanical and optical conditions. The lens could fit 42mm push-on or 40.5mm screw-on filters and shade hoods.
88174811 :Piction ID--Tomahawk missile launcher in production---Please tag these photos so information can be recorded.---- Digitization of this image made possible by a grant from NEH: NEH and the San Diego Air and Space Museum