Showing posts with label canon ee17. Show all posts
Showing posts with label canon ee17. Show all posts

Thursday, November 2, 2017

Canon Demi EE17

The Canon Demi EE17 is an excellent half frame camera that produces 24x18mm pictures. The pictures are composed in the portrait format. Rotate the camera 90 degrees and you're taking pics in landscape format! It's equipped with a 30mm/f1.7 lens. According to the literature it's made up of 6 elements in 4 components.

Canon Demi EE17 Half Frame Camera 

The ISO range for this camera is 25-400. The shutter speeds go from 1/8 to 1/500 plus a Bulb setting. The size of the camera is slightly larger than pocket size. It fits comfortably in the hand and mine came with a Canon wrist strap that screws into the tripod mount on the bottom of the camera.

The flash shoe was dangling when I got this one. It ended up falling off and I haven't bothered to remove the top and reattach it yet. For flash photography, I hand held the flash. The camera's small and light enough that you can do that without much fuss.

The shutter was gummed up so I had to go in and give it the ol' naphtha treatment. That was several months ago. So when I snapped my first couple of shots this month, I noticed that it was way too sluggish and wouldn't make it through the month without another round of naphtha and I also used some graphite on the blades this time. It seems to be hanging in there but I wouldn't be surprised if I have to go into the lens element again in the future.

This camera does a great job in the auto mode. Just don't forget that you still have to do the focusing. The focusing on this camera is zone focus and there are icons in the viewfinder (Portrait/Group/Scenery) to let you know the approximation of that focus.

The CdS light meter is located above the lens barrel. The lens cap will not block out the meter. So I put the camera in an old Kodak zipper case to keep the light out and save the battery.

I decided to shoot some Kodak Gold 200 film just because I've shot a lot of black and white the past few months. I also shot color film with this camera when I first got it. I think I'll load it with some black and white film the next time I use it.

Please note: My developer was exhausted! I knew I was pushing my luck using old chemicals. But hopefully you can still see that the camera is very capable with an excellent lens. And the auto exposure mode seems to get it right a majority of the time.

Film: Expired Kodak Gold 200
Developer: Unicolor C41 Kit (exhausted!)
Scanner: Epson V550

Next month's camera: Chinon  35 EE-II

Canon Demi EE17

Canon Demi EE17

Canon Demi EE17

Canon Demi EE17

Canon Demi EE17

Canon Demi EE17


Tuesday, May 23, 2017

introduction


I knew it was a bad idea to count up the number of film cameras I own. I thought I had maybe 12 and had a great idea of using a single film camera each month for an entire year. As it turns out, I actually own 18 vintage film cameras. 

So I've decided to spend the next year and a half using these cameras and sharing my results here. I’m not setting any rules regarding film (black and white? color?) or how many pictures I can take in any given month. My only rule will be that I will only carry one single camera for the entire month.

The Line-Up:

Manual Cameras:

Agfa Solinette
IMG_20170523_204759


Agfa Isoflash Rapid C
IMG_20170523_204636


Canon Demi EE17 (half frame)
IMG_20170524_172415


Medium Format:

Ansco Color Clipper (w/flash)
IMG_20170524_173515
Petri
IMG_20170524_173154
Ansco Titan
IMG_20170524_172544

Franka Solida III
IMG_20170524_175749
Zeiss Ikon Ikoflex 1b
IMG_20170524_173314


SLR’s:

Sears TLS
IMG_20170524_173429
GAF L-17
IMG_20170524_180001
Konica Autorex (full and half-frame)
IMG_20170524_175848

Rangefinders:
Olympus XA
IMG_20170524_172500
Konica Auto S
IMG_20170524_180129
Chinon 35 EE II
IMG_20170524_172821
Vivitar 35ES
IMG_20170524_172732
Yashica Electro 35 CC
IMG_20170524_172905
Ricoh 500G
IMG_20170524_172619
Fujica 35 EE
Fujica 35 EE Rangefinder
I will try to mix it up from month to month but—due to the disproportion of certain camera styles—this won’t be mathematically possible. Actually, I think I’ll shoot these cameras in alphabetical order because it’s a pretty good mix that way.

Zeiss Ikon Ikoflex 1b TLR