Mike Eckman has a nice blog post on the history of the venerable Packard. I have and use three of these wonderful devices pretty regularly.
Mike Eckman has a nice blog post on the history of the venerable Packard. I have and use three of these wonderful devices pretty regularly.
Thanks. I have a couple of synced ones I use in my studio. For studio use, with flash, they're much easier to use than any of the more modern alternatives.
Thanks, but I'd rather just watch:
Large format: http://flickr.com/michaeldarnton
Mostly 35mm: http://flickr.com/mdarnton
You want digital, color, etc?: http://www.flickr.com/photos/stradofear
Great. Long live the Packard Shutter! Hopefully we'll see some new No.8 shutters in the future.
That's a very interesting blog. Thank you for sharing it. Best of luck to Jon Gilchrist and the next iteration of Packard Shutter!
And, as Karl notes, perhaps there is hope to see some new No. 8 shutters at some point. Hope you're listening Jon!
And best wishes also to Reno. He's been very helpful in the past when I've needed a specific shutter or part!
I subscribe to Mike's blog - he does wonderful in-depth reviews of old cameras (mostly small and medium format) pretty much every week. Never a dull read.
Thanks, Randy!
Good news. I have talked to and bought from Reno a few times.
I have 7 working Packards and one that's maybe 5" ID and a slightly different than normal design. Might not be a Packard. It looks like new and won't work. Has an extra leaf. Peter has it right now and last I hear he can't make it work either...It hangs...
I am a big fan of Packard shutters and have adapted them to some odd setups, such as inside a Linhof Kardan with DIY sync.
Very interesting. I had no idea of the Packard shutter history in my town, Kalamazoo!
Terry
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