Photographica
Posted: Sun 17 May 2015, 20:01
I have just spent an enjoyable day wandering around Photographica with a friend. In some ways, it is bit like a car boot sale although there are the usual exotica going for some high prices and some genuinely old cameras. There was a Gandolfi, for example, with a price tag of £2,500.
http://www.pccgb.net/photographica_fair.html
I had gone with the intention of just looking around, but my friend had other ideas, so I ended up with a Vivitar Series 1 70-210 which he spotted for me. It has obviously seen some use although it appears to be OK optically. Back in the day, this was a popular premium lens and would have cost a lot more than the tenner I laid out, even before taking the effects of inflation into account. The main problem is that it has a Nikon mount, a brand of camera that quite remarkably I do not own, which means that I could be spending much more on an adapter. With on sensor image stabilisation and focus peaking available on modern mirrorless cameras, old manual focus lenses are having something of a renaissance and the best examples from premium brands, such as Leica R optics, are seeing some significant price increases, having been in the doldrums not so long ago. For me, it is just as much fun finding a lens with a lesser reputation and trying it out.
It turns out that Vivitar did not actually make any of its lenses and subcontracted the manufacture to other companies which means there are five different variants of this lens dating from different periods. Mine seems to be the first version, produced by Kiron in 1984 some nine years after the lens was introduced if I understand the identification algorithm of the serial number correctly. The third version appears to have been the best, but any of the early ones are OK with the last two versions better avoided.
http://www.robertstech.com/vivitar.htm
http://www.pccgb.net/photographica_fair.html
I had gone with the intention of just looking around, but my friend had other ideas, so I ended up with a Vivitar Series 1 70-210 which he spotted for me. It has obviously seen some use although it appears to be OK optically. Back in the day, this was a popular premium lens and would have cost a lot more than the tenner I laid out, even before taking the effects of inflation into account. The main problem is that it has a Nikon mount, a brand of camera that quite remarkably I do not own, which means that I could be spending much more on an adapter. With on sensor image stabilisation and focus peaking available on modern mirrorless cameras, old manual focus lenses are having something of a renaissance and the best examples from premium brands, such as Leica R optics, are seeing some significant price increases, having been in the doldrums not so long ago. For me, it is just as much fun finding a lens with a lesser reputation and trying it out.
It turns out that Vivitar did not actually make any of its lenses and subcontracted the manufacture to other companies which means there are five different variants of this lens dating from different periods. Mine seems to be the first version, produced by Kiron in 1984 some nine years after the lens was introduced if I understand the identification algorithm of the serial number correctly. The third version appears to have been the best, but any of the early ones are OK with the last two versions better avoided.
http://www.robertstech.com/vivitar.htm