Bill Lawlor wrote:

Derby, I had an early 67 and would not agree that it required any special
treatment. It was a real brick. I never had a problem with my very used 67.
You could probably pound nails and break rocks with one. It would be a great
camera to have in a hostile crowd. With a long lens it would make a war
hammer fit for Thor.

The shuttered len is a great option because the focal plane shutter shakes
the camera without a heavy tripod. The shuttered lens was to get higher
flash synch for weddings, etc. I never used the 90mm but if it is as good as
the 55mm and 105mm it is superb.

You might need the double cable release they offered. It opens the fp
shutter in B just before the lens shutter fires.

Wait 'till you lay a 6X7  Velvia chrome on the light box!

Bill Lawlor


I tried to pick up my second roll of slides from my 67 this afternoon. There was stabilizer residue on the film. I quietly took it back to the lab (I have all-access to my lab) and they cleaned it so I have to pick it up tomorrow.
These were shots of the beach using a hand-held meter. They looked great - and yes, on a light table they look awesome. These shots were Kodak E100.
After looking at slides for a while, I do not look forward to looking at negatives (not expert enough at reading them) or prints...


Looking at using my medium format more and more,

C�sar
Panama City, Florida



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