hmmm some of the Exa'a are cheap . . . and there are a lot "for repair" available.
glass is affordable also
anyway yea nice idea. I wonder does the Exa produce any distinctive image styles
like the Holga with its blurrey edges and dark corners for instance.
sounds like a nice idea
My thoughts entirely.
My interest is piqued sufficiently to find out if Exa photos have a defined "signature". If not, IMO, there's little to warrant buying one. It's also probably why it's unlikely there'd be a Nikon or Canon version of this project. Most "modern" cameras / lenses were designed to eradicate such things and produce photos that are sharp from edge to edge, contrasty and virtually undistinguishable from one another.
Aside from vignetting with lenses over 135mm, there is nothing distinctive about the images themselves, no visual gimmicks. That is sort of the point.
Because the Exa is a "real" camera but about as a basic as a "real" camera can get. It has interchangeable lenses, it has interchangeable viewfinders, you can obtain excellent image quality if you want - but you have to live within the Exa's limited, simple world. Three and a half shutter speeds - 1/25, 1/50, 1/100, and 1/150. A mirror that blacks out until you wind on. No internal meter, no superfluous doodads.
Could you adapt a lens that vignettes or gives crazy blurriness? Of course (try a lens from an old Imperial 127 camera - or a wide angle auxiliary lens with a flipped element). There are also some early lenses for the Exakta sysem with distinctive rendering. On the other hand if you want something conventional you have lenses like the Pancolar and Schneider Xenon. Adapt the camera to your photographic tastes, that is the fun I think in this project.
PS: I would recommend staying away from the Exa II, Exa IIb, and Exa 500. These are all more conventional cameras with focal plane shutters - and all much more like to be broken and unusable than the Exas with the metal sector shutter. I would not turn away anybody who uses them - but be warned!
PPS: the Exa 1a, b, c group on flickr:
https://www.flickr.com/groups/exa/pool/