My long suffering friends on this thread (TinTin and Hungry Mike) know I love tiny cameras. One of the reasons I like the lighter compact stuff is that I am frequently dragging a spare camera places (such as the canoe trip I just came back from) where weight and space matters. But it is also just a weird obsession with me — one part of this obsession is the subject of this thread: ultra-compact 35mm travel cameras!
Here are some that I like, and I would like to hear from other fanboys and fangirls:
#1: Balda/Voigtlander Vito C
Recently (in
TinTin's Fuji 690 review) I was gushing over the XA series of cameras. As a non-XA is at the top of the list, I guess this is a bit of a retraction of some of that love!
I still love the XAs, but I do not know if any of them perfectly overlap with what I am looking for.
I usually take the Vito C (a minox clone) camping and took an XA2 with me this weekend. I now realize why my Vito C is my go-to in this category: It has scale focus, where units of measurement are displayed instead of icons of various torsos in different states of dismemberment. I have decided that I really do not like the zone focus system (if it is not accompanied with units of measure). This camera is also one of the lightest and smallest cameras that I own. It can slide into a pocket and not get in the way whilst paddling or humping a backpack over a portage. And has an awesome lens. This is a bit trivial but unlike many of the ‘real' minox 35s this camera uses good old SR44 batteries. (All in this list use SR44 batteries.)
The downside, is that I think I might be killing it with my love! It has developed a small light leak that I am guessing it around its retractable lens. Again, I have
really mistreated it (and feel bad about it). I am not quite ready to blame the light leak on its design, it could have been how it has been slapped around. I just recently noticed the leak so I need to see if I can cheaply fix it.
My Vito C in its typical environment
The “UFO-like” blur in the upper right is the light leak#2: Chinon Bellami
This is a bit of a goofy ‘barn door’ camera and I have not used it as much as I should, but the more I think about it, this camera has everything I like in a compact camera: It has scale focus. It is compact – not as tiny as the Vito C but generally in the XA ballpark. It is one of the heavier, but for the “plastic haters” out there (cough cough, Tintin) it has a fair bit of metal in the design of it. Its Chinon lens is known to be contrasty and sharp. I
A downside is that while the ‘barn door’ mechanism (which opens when you cock the camera) is a marvel, I find that having a door open on both sides of the lens makes adjusting the focus somewhat difficult as they get in more in the way than the drawbridge style mechanism that the Vito C uses. Additionally, this design, while technically clever, certainly adds to the complexity and this may offset any robustness that it gets from its more metallic design. I am going to shoot more with this, this summer. I was going to post some pics from this camera, but I could not find any. (In my defence, I normally use these cameras when I am away from home and there is more than one camera in the mix and I do not label the canisters as I shoot them.)
#3 Olympus XA
My XA has been a bit of a shelf queen lately, but I am going to put it into more active service. The XA was not expensive, but having a couple of XA2/3s kicking around made me want to pamper this one. Also, the rangefinder, whilst an amazing design, has a fairly small focus-patch. However, it does have the one thing I really want, a focus scale! So I will be bringing this out to use more than I have. As the usability of the rangefinder is not Leica-esque, I am going to consider its rangefinder as a bonus to the scale focus system that it has. Lastly, the folding lenses of the Vito C and the Chinon are clever, but (as evidenced by the light leak in the Vito C) they can be points of failure. So the XA series gets bonus points for being compact and not requiring a folding lens. Even tho this camera is #3 on my list, I still contend that it is a beautiful design.
XA#4 XA2 / XA3
These were the cameras that I always thought were my faves, but somehow other cameras were seeing more action. I love everything about these cameras other than the zone focus system. I have decided that any camera that does not have at least a scale focus system, does not fully cut the mustard for me. To be fair, I think part of my problem is a result of something that the designers did not envision: I am sure that when
Maitani designed the XA series, he assumed they would be a nice second camera to an OM-system. But film cameras are now so bloody cheap that many of us have dozens of cameras. If I only had one OM and an XA2 I would probably remember what the distances are for the XA2's little zone icons. But I have more than one zone focus camera, and their distances and icons are different enough that I never can exactly remember the distance settings.
I have other cameras that did not make the cut and some that are similar (e.g. 110’s and half frames) but did not want to make this message any longer than it is, especially as
I really am interested in knowing if FW has any other fans of tiny cameras? BTW, I found this link to
an old Pop Sci article on mini cameras kind of fun.
Many of you have likely the
Submin fan site, but for those that have not, it is quite good (even tho I think it is not really added to much these days)…