after buying one I'm interested in all information on it.
But it's hard to find them in the internet.
Does anyone has links or even pdfs?
Kind regards
after buying one I'm interested in all information on it.
But it's hard to find them in the internet.
Does anyone has links or even pdfs?
Kind regards
https://www.instagram.com/martin_photographer_printer/
Which size - 4x5 or 8x10.
Which model - there were several, starting with cameras made by Wisner or Tachihara and private labeled by Zone VI, and ending with the Lightweight that was made by Calumet after they bought Zone VI.
The guru is Richard Ritter - he worked for Fred Picker and actually built many of the cameras during the period when Zone VI actually produced them.
There was an excellent history of the Zone VI camera in View Finder Magazine many years ago. There is also this Photo.net thread: https://www.photo.net/forums/topic/1...-history-info/
As mentioned, the "Zone VI camera" was really several different cameras made by different companies over time with different features. This is true for other cameras as well, such as the "Tachihara camera", the "Wista camera", and others. This unfortunately complicates things, because you can end up with a camera that is somewhat different that what you expected.
The only suggestions I can give is to be careful, figure out what features are important to you FIRST, and remember that a lot of the Zone VI cameras can be found under different labels at a lower price -- the Zone VI label has a fad following.
http://www.subclub.org/toko/4x5table.htm
FYI - I have a complete copy of Fred Pickers Zone VI Newsletters and they have descriptions of the camera and it's many iterations. Try and find these for a good understanding of Fred's dream machine. I personally never had his camera but used to love his insights into photography, if a little opinionated.
Mr. Powell is dead-on. The first ZoneVI view camera was a re-branded Tachihara, and the one modification Fred Picker made was to replace the base plate with a stronger one. So you could google "Tachihara Field Camera" and see what info is out there. The second and third cameras were almost identical, first made by Ron Wisner for ZoneVI, and then sold under his own name. I just googled "Wisner View Camera" and got a bunch of hits, so that is my suggestion, since there were few if any differences between those sold under the ZoneVI or Wisner name.
If it is the later model, here you go: https://cameraeccentric.com/static/i...s/zonevi_2.pdf
Interesting link. I wonder if they have the complete IPT quarterly from 1955/56 on. I am missing a few. They have been a great LF/general photography resource over the years.
thanks a lot, I'll post a image later on
https://www.instagram.com/martin_photographer_printer/
I have the 8x10 made by Zone VI. Bought it second-hand but looking new in 1996 (no longer looks anything like new). In New Mexico I talked with the fellow who took over the construction of the first 500 of them. (Bruce?)
Not a lightweight, but not a beast, either. Light trap where the back attaches to the camera is minimal and I sometimes get a light leak if the back is not centered well on the back of the camera body. Sometimes wish for another inch or two of extension...will not handle a 28" lens except at infinity with the gears on the last teeth (I have a 2D for that lens), tho no problem with the 24" RDA.
Bruce told me of being on the phone talking to people waiting for their cameras(pre-paid) to be finished and sent to them...while rejecting piece after piece of the wood parts for the cameras for being out of spec.
"Landscapes exist in the material world yet soar in the realms of the spirit..." Tsung Ping, 5th Century China
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