Anyone else here into WWII era Cameras? Say 1930's-1950's
The contax was nicely made (the Zeiss version) and a metal shutter that travelled vertically..but the shutter was delicate...however you couldnt burn holes in it as occasionally happened to Leica rfdr cameras that were left in the sun with their lens uncapped! I liked the long baselength rangefinder on the contax but the lens mount was odd when mounting the big 85mm Sonnar. I also liked folding Zeiss including the nettars and some of the old uncoated lenses performed great as long as you watched where the sun was shining! ...and the bellows didn't have holes in them. In an old Leica book/manual they describe what a breakthrough the so called 'minature 35mm cameras' were by detailing a German archeological expedition that travelled to Egypt...the book compared the expeditions old large format cameras with glass plates that would grate with sand particles when they were being developed...vs the 'new'! 35mm Leica where the film was rolled back into the steel cassettes after exposure so they could developed at leisure..in cleaner conditions!!!At the end of the war the russian seized the Zeiss Ikon plants in Dresden and Jena, they sent the parts and equipment to Kiev where they produced a copy of the Contax II rangefinder camera. The camera was produced mostly unchanged from 1947 to the 1980's. General Patton favorite camera was a Leica.
What did you scan it on?No filters,just increased contrast digitally.



























