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 Expired 07/2005. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Expired 07/2005. 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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