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Thread: Found Lens, what camera to buy

  1. #1

    Question Found Lens, what camera to buy

    Hi All,

    This is my first post and I'm a total newbie to Large Format.

    I currently shoot 35mm and MF and have always wanted to move up to Large Format, preferably 4x5. Well, I was purchasing a used enlarger and for $10 more, the sellers said they'd throw in a box of photography "junk" that included an old slide projector that I wanted. I decided to go for it and lo' and behold, at the bottom I find a Kodak Commercial Ektar f:6.3 10 inch. lens on a No. 4 synchro shutter mounted to what I'm guessing is a lens board. The board is aluminum I think and measures 4"x4". Glass is clean, no fungus, and shutter seems to function at all speeds. I'm thinking this is a sign for me to move to Large Format.

    So, I'm wondering what type of camera will this lens work with? I've been doing some internet research and I figure to start all I need is a camera with some film holders. There seem to be alot available for auction (Calumet, Toyo, etc.), but I'd like to get one that this lens would work well for. Would any single rail work? How about a 4x5 Crown/Speed Graphic?

    Thanks for any advice and/or tips.

    Tony

  2. #2

    Join Date
    Apr 2006
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    S.E. Iowa
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    Re: Found Lens, what camera to buy

    How about a 4x5 Graphic View II view camera? Then lens board should fit and the View II has enough bellows extention to handle the 10" Ektar.

    The lens will also cover 5x7 so you could look for one of those.

    Or, I am thinking it is sign for you to sell the lens to me for $14 so you can make a 40% profit.

    Wayne

  3. #3

    Join Date
    Sep 2003
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    Re: Found Lens, what camera to buy

    A Commercial Ektar is a well-regarded lens useful as a long lens on 4" X 5" or slightly long for 5" X 7". It might be a little frustrating as the only lens on a 4x5.

  4. #4

    Join Date
    May 2009
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    Re: Found Lens, what camera to buy

    Used a 10 Comm Ektar on 8x10 and with an early Toyo field ( grey aluminum model) The lens was sharp and made nice images but it is long for 4x5. Some 4x5s may not have the bellows extension to do moderate closeups, I believe a Crown Graphic Bellows only extends to 12 inches. I was great on the Toyo, really a 5x7, and a little low on coverage with an 8x10, would cover straight on but very minimal movements.
    Great find.

    Tom

  5. #5

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    Re: Found Lens, what camera to buy

    I have that same lens and just finished cleaning up a Kodak 5x7 2D to put it on. Now to find some time....
    ____________________________________________

    Richard Wasserman

    https://www.rwasserman.com/

  6. #6

    Join Date
    Oct 2004
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    S.W. Wyoming
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    Re: Found Lens, what camera to buy

    Well, that's kind of an unusual request. Most buy a camera and then go searching for a lens. You have acquired one of the finest lenses out there. You mentioned the board is aluminum. Can you post a picture? Maybe we can identify the camera it came from. Speed and Crown Graphics make great cameras for beginners. Or for anyone else, for that matter. They don't cost all that much, either. I use them all the time. A 10" lens will work fine on one, for everything but really close focus. You would be using the very sharpest part of the image circle on 4X5. I wish you well.

  7. #7

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    Re: Found Lens, what camera to buy

    Tony, you did really well.

  8. #8
    MIke Sherck's Avatar
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    Mar 2002
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    Elkhart, IN
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    Re: Found Lens, what camera to buy

    A good quality lens. It will make a good long lens for 4x5, for example, perfect for head and shoulders portraits, it would be a normal lens on 5x7, and is a moderate wide angle for 8x10. Good luck with it! If there's a letter "L" with a circle around it on the front of the lens, that means it's coated. ("Luminized"). You can date the lens by the two letters preceding the serial number:

    CAMEROSITY = 1234567890. So a lens with a serial number of, say, RO_____ would have been made in 1956. It isn't important, just one of those bits of trivia that you can pull out at cocktail parties to wow pretty photographers of the opposite sex...

    Mike
    Politically, aerodynamically, and fashionably incorrect.

  9. #9
    Jon Shiu's Avatar
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    Nov 2003
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    Re: Found Lens, what camera to buy

    I would get one of the Calumet CC-400 rail cameras. A good basic 4x5 monorail for around $100 that takes 4x4 in. boards.

    Jon
    my black and white photos of the Mendocino Coast: jonshiu.zenfolio.com

  10. #10

    Join Date
    May 2002
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    Re: Found Lens, what camera to buy

    Any 4x5 camera will do fine. I use a 10" f/4.5 lens in a No. 4 shutter on my Tachihara, perhaps as delicate a camera as you'll find. The only one complaining is me, from having to carry the lens/shutter.

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