The Canon Pellix was first produced in 1965. Like the contemporary Pentax Spotmatic the Pellix provides through-the-lens metering which requires the aperture to be stopped down with a lever to obtain a reading. Unlike the Pentax and any other single lens reflex 35mm camera of that time, however, the Pellix did not have a swinging mirror which directed the image to the viewfinder before being flipped out of the way to expose the image. Instead, the Canon has a stationary pellicle mirror which directs one-third of the light coming through the lens to the viewfinder with the remaining two-thirds passing through the semi-transparent mirror to the image plane. That means that there is no blink when the shutter is activated, but it also means that the image seen in the finder is a bit dimmer than with more conventional slr cameras. Mine shows that dimness, but the view is still pretty good, due in part to the fast Canon FL 50/1.4 lens.
Showing posts with label Billie Holiday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Billie Holiday. Show all posts
Saturday, January 16, 2021
Cannon Pellix
While I'm at the kitchen sink developing film I generally ask Alexa to play me whatever is on NPR or some music. On this occasion I asked for what Alexa had of Billie Holiday. I think Amazon probably determines the song order by which ones are most often requested. So, I got to hear Strange Fruit and several other familiar tunes during the half hour of film processing. That was such a nice experience that I continued with Holiday's songs on Youtube while I massaged the images on Photoshop for the rest of the day. One of the Youtube links had just about every tune that she sang.
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