View allAll Photos Tagged LeicaM3,
Analogica con Leica M3 - Voightlander 21mm f4 - fomapan 400 sviluppata in Hydrofen semi stand 1+59. Scansione con reflex digitale eos 60D ed elaborazione/inversione con negative lab pro.
Photograph scanned from an original hand-printed, selenium-toned print made with Ilford MG FB Classic paper
This is the camera that most of my film shots are taken with, nowadays. It's a Leica M3, with the 50/2 Dual Range Summicron. Both made around 1960.
Photograph taken with the aid of a local photographer who let us use his product photography equipment for an afternoon -- great fun! :)
Leica M3, Voigtlander Heliar Classic50mm f1.5, Kodak Gold 200
digital dupe with Sigma Art 70mm Macro on Canon 5D MK4
my test shots finally using my Leica M3 film.
Ilford HP5 Plus, Black and White Print Film, 135 (35 mm), ISO 400
first photos taken with this camera for over 50 years.
Oskar Barnack (1 November 1879 – 16 January 1936) was a German optical engineer, precision mechanic, industrial designer, and the father of 35 mm photography.
He was an enthusiastic photographer, but the heavy equipment of the day was difficult for him to handle due to his poor health (asthma). In 1912, he constructed a 35 mm movie camera.
Between 1913 and 1914 he was head of development at Leitz. He was the driving force behind the making of the first mass-marketed 135 camera and the introduction of the 24 × 36 mm film format which came to be known as 35mm.
Leica M3
Leitz Summicron M 50mm 1:2
Kodak T-Max 400 @ 800, Rodinal, 1:50, 12min.
Donaukanal / Marienbrücke / Vienna / Austria
Please view on flickriver and choose a white background:
www.flickriver.com/photos/105795038@N03/
It looks better :-)