Zeiss Ikon SW Super Wide 35mm Rangefinder Camera Body 1405680

Zeiss Ikon Vintage 35mm Cameras All Auction Buy It Now 480 Results Brand: ZEISS Brand Model Condition Price Buying Format All Filters Zeiss Ikon Contaflex 35mm SLR Film Camera Tessar Meter Expos Lens + UNTESTED $24.95 $9.95 shipping Zeiss Ikon Contina II 35mm film camera made in Germany 1956-1958. $22.50 1 bid $12.45 shipping 35m 46s Vintage Camera Zeiss Ikon Folding Camera $28.00 0 bids $12.80 shipping 5d 19h Zeiss Ikon Contessa 35mm Rangefinder w/Zeiss-Opton Tessar 45mm 1:2.8 Lens, Case $69.00 $9.99 shipping or Best Offer ZEISS IKON SYMBOLICA 35mm Film CARL ZEISS TESSAR LENS f2.8 GERMANY #Y47052 $12.00

Zeiss Ikon 35mm Camera Camera House

The Zeiss Ikon in the hand First impressions of a camera for me start with the moment I pick one one up. And actually I think picking a Zeiss Ikon up is enough to make you realise how different one is from a Leica. The Zeiss Ikon feels lighter weight. Zeiss Ikon ZM 35mm Rangefinder Review - Everything a Rangefinder Should Be - Casual Photophile A few months ago, I sang the praises of the Zeiss C Biogon 35/2.8 M mount lens. In that earlier review, I spoke to my wife's sixth sense and how she dealt me a whopper of an anniversary surprise in that glorious lens. US$1,500 for a working, freshly overhauled Zeiss Ikon Contax IIIa that theoretically would last as long as I'm likely to last (if not longer). While that might actually be less expensive than a full Leica M4 or M4-2 outfit (another rangefinder I'm interested in), it is nevertheless quite an investment — especially for a 35mm camera. Six years later in 1950, Zeiss released the Contax IIa, a major update to this incredible rangefinder, and nearly seventy years later it remains one of the best cameras ever made. A 35mm film rangefinder camera, the Contax IIa continues a line of machines that stretches back to the original Contax I of 1932, and is the last of the non-metered.

Zeiss Ikon Contina I, 35mm Camera in Case Cowan's Auction House The Midwest's Most Trusted

The new Zeiss Ikon SW 35mm camera follows in that tradition and is built for the uncompromising photographer who likes to make wide angle images. So where does a 35mm rangefinder--heck, the SW has no finder--camera fit into today's digital photography world? CLA'd [TOP MINT in BOX w/ Case] Zeiss Ikon ZM Silver 35mm Film Camera From JAPAN. $2,299.90. $50.00 shipping 【Top MINT】 Zeiss Ikon ZM Black Leica M Rangefinder Film Camera Body From JAPAN. $1,899.99. $39.99 shipping. 14 watching. Zeiss Ikon ZM Black Rangefinder Film Camera w/ zeiss 25mm f2.8. Here's something a little different for a Featured User Review - instead of the usual digital camera or zoom lens review, I chose this excellent review for a film camera - and a rangefinder at that! The fact is, there are still plenty of film shooters and the Zeiss Ikon rangefinder is a truly beautiful piece of camera equipment. Zeiss Ikon 35mm Rangefinder Rangefinders DESCRIPTION The Zeiss Ikon camera combines a classical design with easy-to-use operation. Features and controls are designed to make practical photography comfortable and free from unpleasant surprises caused by the camera.

Zeiss Ikon ZM 35mm Film Camera

Prior to 1951, the 35mm folding Zeiss had been known as the Ikonta 35, and when the Ikonta eventually became known by the name Contessa, a less expensive model was developed and released alongside. This more affordable folding 35mm camera became known as the Contina, and it would see continual production in various forms for the next 15 years. This is what the Contessa 35's viewfinder is SUPPOSED to look like. The viewfinder was bright and easy to use with a crisp and contrasty rangefinder patch, and had the piece needed to make a proper rectangle image. The lens was crystal clear, the shutter worked at all speeds, and all of the camera's various controls, from the film advance. The Zeiss Ikon has a much larger measuring base (75 millimetres on the Zeiss vs 37 millimetres on the Bessa, due to the viewfinder magnification of 0.74 the Ikon's effective measurement base is 55.9 mm), a larger and brighter rangefinder, a modified film rewind, and a completely independent design obviously inspired by both the 1930s Contax bodi. Zeiss Ikon is a German company that was formed in 1926 by the merger of four camera makers ( Contessa-Nettel, Ernemann, Goerz and Ica ), and an infusion of capital by Zeiss [1]. The company formed one part of the Carl Zeiss Foundation, another part being the optical company Carl Zeiss.

Zeiss Ikon ZM 35mm Rangefinder Film Camera in Black with Strap a0641 SuperB JAPAN CAMERA

Zeiss-Ikon Contaflex Super (1959) This is a Zeiss-Ikon Contaflex Super, a 35mm Single Lens Reflex leaf shutter camera made by Zeiss-Ikon AG in Stuttgart, West Germany between the years 1959 and 1962. It was part of the long lived Contaflex series that saw many variations between the original Contaflex I in 1953 all the way to the Contaflex S. This is a Contessa 35 (model 533/24), a compact folding 35mm rangefinder camera made in Stuttgart, Germany by Zeiss-Ikon between the years 1950 and 1955. The Contessa was designed as a premiere fixed lens compact folding camera that had the features and quality of the best of what Germany could offer at the time.