Hands down the prettiest SLR of all time has to be the OM-1. It is about as gorgeous as an inanimate object can be. The design is timeless, and looks as good now as it did when I first lusted after one. And the viewfinder - I've never seen better. These cameras in terms of just beautiful things to look at just beat the pants off of all the newer DSLRs with their shapeless form.
I used the Minolta X-700 which was a great camera. We used it in the Army’s 3rd Armored Division’s Public Affairs Office when I was a photographer for them. I carried two, my own and the one I was assigned. I carried a K-1000 in the cold weather caused the batteries to die on me, which happened in Germany in the winter. It’s the main reason I always have a full manual camera with me when I go out shooting pictures. The full manual one I use now is the FM-10. For a light inexpensive camera it’s surprisingly good. I would recommend it as a beginner camera. Up there with the K-1000.
Your excellent presentation was enjoyed by me, but I do have a few comments. I was born 21 FEB 1950 and lived in New York City from 1971 - 1983, so I was literally immersed into the camera scene which you talk about. (I now live in Philadelphia.) Somehow, Kamerastore seems a name bit familiar: some years ago I remember hearing of people in a Scandinavian country trying to amass a great quantity of film cameras (camera rescue?) in order to preserve the film legacy. Is this YOU? First, the Nikon F2, which supplanted the original F, was really the best clockwork SLR ever created. There, Nikon outdid itself and, as good as the F was, the F2 was, as you imply, the final version of the F with all the bugs ironed out. (I say this while being NOT a great fan of Nikon.) When the F3 came out in 1980, there was a massive effort by professionals to acquire the last F2 cameras. Back then, the outright fear of the reliability of electronic shutters was really intense. Nikon KNEW of this great fear and used maximum engineering effort in order to assuage such fears. The quality of the Nikon F3 was the result of such a great effort and was the primary reason why professionals eventually decided that electronics actually could be reliable. The somewhat “less” professional FE (2) and FM (2) cameras were also great, but through the years (camera shows, etc) I have seen too many FE (2) SLRs which had inoperative shutters. For me, the FM (2) would have been a far better choice. You know, Nikormat was also a viable choice for a simply mechanical body (though the EL was electronic). They are really cheap now. Your omission of both the Minolta SR-T series and the semi-professional XE-5 and XE-7 is rather inexcusable. You speak of a silky smooth film advance for the Nikon F3. Have you ever advanced film on the XE series? The XE bodies are built like tanks. The SR-T is ‘almost’ built like a tank. Back in the 70s, Minolta glass was considered to be ‘almost’ as good as Nikon and Canon. Today, however, Minolta glass is seen for what it truly is: among the best on the planet. Their electronic bodies (X-370, X-700, etc) were not built to the same robust standards as the SR-T and XE-5 (-7), but their glass was stupendous. Pentax is on your list, but only with the outrageously over played K1000. Yes, it is a very good and reliable simple camera, and Pentax glass is tops. But K1000 has no self-timer like the KX or Spotmatic have. What you omitted, however, is the tiny jewel that is the Pentax MX. If I compare that to the Olympus OM-1, I would opt for the MX, any day. Seemingly similar to the MX were the ME and ME Super. However, the troubles with the electronic shutters on the ME series are legion. This is why the MX is rarely available and is much, much more expensive than those of the ME series. Yes the Olympus OM-1 is a good camera, but far and away too ‘sexy’, too socially optimized, for it to be rationally prioritized as ‘best of the small’. Canon spent an untold sum of money and engineering effort in order to conceal the fact the the AE-1 had a plastic top cover. Many, today, still do not know that that top cover is plastic! That was how paranoid people were back in 1976 when it was introduced. It is a great camera, really great, but, two years later when the A-1 came out, the A-1 was considered to be an even better camera. But today, the ‘greatness’ attaches solely to the AE-1 (and Program). The A-1 gathers dust. Personally, I think that the A-1 was a case of ‘having too much’ and, thus, was a bit confusing to deal with. Earlier mechanical Canons, (FTb, TL, FX, etc) are truly great SLRs, but with my obsession with making minor repairs on such old beasts, I find that these Canon mechanicals are too over-engineered. Their prism is also prone to fungus problems. Compared with the Pentax Spotmatics, they have twice as many gears, twice as much opportunity to break. Indeed, still with Pentax, I consider the ‘master of simplicity and reliability in consumer SLRs’ to be the predecessors of the Spotmatic: the H1a and SV. Your speaking about the ultra modern film SLRs (like Canon EOS, Nikon N65, N8008, Minolta Maxxum) was very well put. As much experience as I have with this topic, I still cannot understand how they are so maligned and left to rot. I think that the main reason is the fact that batteries for most of these seemingly cost a fortune. There are exceptions: Minolta Maxxum takes AAA batteries and Nikon N8008 (S) takes the ever-present AA batteries) but most take really costly batteries. That said, there are places online where such batteries are rather affordable (I.e., Battery Junction). But, these SLRs are selling for nothing, so people venturing into this area should strongly consider their real worth. Yes, they are ugly and ‘look digital’, but, in most cases, these ultra-modern SLRs will operate on both auto and full manual, and, to boot, have light meters which are better than on most older SLRs. Back in the mid 70s I could walk into a NYC photo store in the Camera District (near Herald Square) and pay 63 cents for a 36-exposure roll of Tri-X. No matter how nostalgic your videos are, or no matter how endearingly they are viewed, the current, outrageous price of film is ruining this party for all of us. The film prices never cease to increase. Foreign operations like FOMA might be the only way to salvage this dilemma, because Ilford, Fuji, and (primarily) Kodak have left the realm of rational pricing. The available consumer grades of color C-41 film are now as expensive as the professional versions were just a few years ago. This, more than anything else, is ruining this love of film photography. - David Lyga
Well said, David. I'm probably around your age, but as a very late bloomer, I became interested in photography (digital) around 20 years ago. It wasn't until January 2021 that I had become interested in 35mm film photography and my wife purchased my first film SLR, the Canon AE-1 for my birthday this year. Since then I have purchased a Nikon F with the Ftn prism head, a Minolta SRT-303, a Nikon FA and the Olympus OM-2SP. As for film prices going through the roof, I totally understand the frustration. However, for me, it's the cost of enjoying my new-found hobby and there are much more expensive hobbies than this.
This guy will show you how to shoot film for 7 cents per picture: ua-cam.com/video/jZ1XJJhGlcg/v-deo.html I rarely shoot color for 35mm (though I do for medium format and 4x5). For 35mm film cameras mostly it is black and white or fun stuff like infrared and Lomo purple. And I follow Steve O'nion's advice to slow down and not take as many pictures. And when you think of it, the drive to Mount Rainier or other scenic spot to take pictures costs a lot more than the film anyway. Plus the film equipment is a lot cheaper than modern digital stuff. So the money you save on equipment can go into the film and processing.
Olympus OM cameras have a number of interchangeable focusing screens. I have the OM 2n and 2sp from new. They are flawless. Very large viewfinder magnification.
The OM-1 viewfinder is not only extremely bright, it also has huge magnification. An OM-2N was my first camera and I still miss it, although I now use an FM2 and Fujifilm digital cameras.
For years the big weakness of the FM2 was its rather grainy viewfinder, and when the FM3a came out, the ability to put a K3 screen on the FM2 improved the camera a lot! 😎 By the way, the FM3a is probably the best of all! It's the only one with a hybrid shutter, which is all mechanical AND all electronic, and it's the only one produced in the XXIst century, which means that it probably won't need the servicing and repair that 40-50 years old cameras need...
OM 1 is a beauty, a workhorse which is easy to handle. I had a Leica R4 and bought the OM as an reserve camera. The OM costed 1/4 the price of R4 and the Zuiko lenses were affordable. I handled the Leica with care but not the OM 1. While the OM 1 never failed (still works) the R4 spent most of its time in the service shop. The Leica R7 was equally bad. (I learned that the Leica R series were nothing but Minolta XD 7) Got rid of the Leica/Summicrons and got myself a OM 2n and OM 4T with its legendary F20 flash. After about 35 odd years these OM cameras still work. Zuiko glasses are compact and as good as the Summicrons. The best portrait lens ever is the compact Zuiko 85 f2.
Wouldn’t touch a Leica. I get it: people love them and they’re very collectible. I just wonder how many great shots are taken with them, compared to an old Nikon. I used OM-3 and OM-1 cameras professionally. Both had motor drives on them. I still have them but I shoot medium format when I use film. I was told by a camera mechanic not to use the OM-3 because it was too valuable. He told me especially not to use it with the motor drive. I used the 85mm f/2 so often I have 85mm eyes. People say to me, ‘Oh but it’s soft in the centre, you know’. Yeah, I do know. It was designed that way because it’s a portrait lens. The spherical aberration is meant to be there because it’s nicer on skin. Now we have pea brains taking portraits with macro lenses.🙄
@@thethirdman225 I have the Zuiko 85mm f/2 and it is a great lens for its intended use. If you stop it down to 5.6 or 8, then it sharpens up quite a lot and can be used for *other* shots. The background blur can be a little nervous if the subject/background distance is not right, but is otherwise good. It's a good lens and I'm glad I managed to snag one. Now I need to get my OM-1 out and take it out for a walk. :)
Back in the late 1960s, I purchased a Nikon F 35mm SLR. Later, I purchased an F2, F3, and F4. Today, I still own and use the F2 and F4. The F2 is my favorite manual/mechanical camera. The F4 is my favorite automatic/electronic camera.
I own all 10 on your list- very good choices. In the mechanical realm, one of the most overlooked gems- the Konica auto reflex T3n- probably one of the most satisfying shutters to hear and feel plus the fantastic hexanon glass. Best student camera learning analog photography- the Minolta X-370 hands down. Excellent viewfinder and meter display and also has aperature priority in auto mode. Great little compact camera I reach for all the time when hiking.
I agree with the Konica and Minolta assessments! I've owned 4 Konica Autoreflex cameras (all with minor mechanical flaws) and those lenses are truly superb. And Minolta, I think, represents the best deals in almost every realm of 35mm SLR. Their SRTs are some of the best deals in mechanical cameras, the X-370/X-500/XG-1 are lovely classic-style electronic cameras, and the Dynax/Maxxum line is second to none in AF value. #MinoltaGang all day! Thanks for watching, Tim! - Connor
Bro, this list is absurd. Their whole list is Nikon/Pentax/Canon LOL. Konica and Minolta get no mention, as you pointed out. And where's the Contax RTS and Olympus OM2?? These guys don't know what they're talking about... seems like they just collectively own a bunch of cameras, mostly Canon, Nikon, and Pentax, because that's what they were told was good.
Great 35mm SLR selection. However 36 years ago I bought my 1st SLR, a Minolta X-370, i took every where doing 2 to 3 films a week, after 6 months it got damage by a by stander who felt and their beer hit my camera, I decided to get it repair, meanwhile I bought Minolta X-700m this one had the Manual mode, Aperture mode, and full program mode, nice camera, most of the time I use manual mode or aperture mode, afterward few months later I saw a Minolta X-570 on sale, well I bought it to complete the set, The Minolta X-570 became my main camera, because the easy way to use the internal light metering and my favorite modes. The draw back of those camera you need a battery to operate the camera, however you are still able to get those battery very easily on the market today.
Glad to see the Nikon F, F2, and F3 get some love. They are the only three SLRs I own, which (excluding my phone) represents 75% of all cameras I own (the last camera being a rangefinder). I started photography at 12 years old in 2001, when film was still king, with the F2, which belonged to my dad at the time. I absolutely love that camera, with my only gripe being that the light meter has died a couple of times on it, which is something to be aware of. Anyway, I never made the switch to digital, and the only camera I own with an electronically controlled shutter is my F3. I shoot almost exclusively Tri-X nowadays, although from time to time I’ll shoot E6 when I want color (which doesn’t happen often; my photography style tends to be complimented by black and white). I’m not a big fan of C41 film, since I find it harder to scan, given there’s no positive color reference. As stupid as this is, I also just think the negatives look ugly. I develop black and white myself, but have a local lab develop my E6 rolls. I just have them developed and cut into strips so that I can scan them myself
In this video, I owned the Canon AE-1, AE-1 Program, A-1 and the Nikon FE2. I agree that the AE-1 and the AE-1 Program is overrated but it was considered my first and second film SLR so learning film photography on it was great! After doing more research on both cameras, I stumble on an article about the A-1 and got hooked! Your statement "More camera for your money" is spot on! I then wanted to try something that is not "Canon" and in the end I ended up with the Nikon FE2. The reason why I chose that instead of the FM2 is because I want to be able to take a picture quickly without adjusting things as much (Street Photography). Comparing Canon and Nikon, Nikon seems to be more solid, rugged and reliable! Holding the A-1 feels so different after! There is one underrated camera that you guys miss, the Nikon FA. Basically, an A-1 with Matrix Metering and a faster shutter speed. I'm actually interested in getting it myself or maybe the F3, FM3A. But what is your opinion when it comes to the FA?
Very nice list. I own several of them, have used most of them, and have played with all of them at some point. As primarily a Canon shooter since the 70s--and before that, Agfa (yes, an Agfa Karat 36, to be precise, that I STILL use)--it's hard to explain the greater popularity and higher prices of the AE-1 and AE-1P over the A-1. The A-1 has all the features of the other two, plus a better meter, better construction, and a lot more. Much of what we expect from modern cameras today--such as multiple shooting modes, multi-purpose control dials, LED viewfinder info, ergonomics, vertical shutter buttons and instant high-speed mode on motor drives/battery grips, etc.--all originated with the A-1. I can't ding any of your choices, though it would have been nice to see the Canon F-1 among them. Pleasantly surprised to see the FTbQL in there. Oh, and the Nikon FM3A--the last and greatest film SLR from the premier film SLR maker--and that's coming from a lifelong Canon guy.
For anyone curious about the Zeiss Ikon/Nikon F relationship: The Zeiss Contarex was released during the year prior to the Nikon F, 1958. In 1959 the F basically destroyed it commercially. No doubt Nikon's simpler take on the SLR design influenced it's dominance over the competition. It's true that the Nikon S rangefinders did share a lot of design elements, including the bayonet mount, with the prewar Contax rangefinders (the model shown in the video is a postwar Contax iiia). It's noteworthy, however, that it was the Leica horizontal curtain shutter mechanism that Nikon chose to incorporate into their cameras, the basic design of which is one of the main functional elements that continued through to the F camera line. Not very much contax survived the transition from SP to F, and what remained didn't last long. Yet the Leica style shutter configuration, in electronically governed titanium form, remained in production until the F3 was discontinued in 2001.
I just picked up a Canon T70. Not because it's the best in any way, but I just love that 80s aesthetic and the super crunchy electronic sounds it makes. And they are very very cheap.
I agree, Saman, there's something so satisfying about the chunky electronic whirs and buzzes that come out of the T series cameras. The aesthetics are definitely polarizing, but I'm glad to see I'm not the only one who loves them. I had a Canon T80 for a long time that I particularly loved. It's the only camera I know with a cross-shaped split prism rather than just a horizontal or diagonal one. I found it SO easy to focus! Thanks for watching! - Connor
All great 35mm film SLR's. One thing about the older film SLR's (Nikon F series in particular) is the robust build quality they were built to take a beating 'back in the day'. I have a Nikon F with the Ftn prism finder circa 1971 and the thing is literally 'built like a tank'. Very little plastic and compared to later SLR's yes it feels quite heavy you know you have a hunk of camera hanging from your neck. And most of the older film SLR's have that 'substantial feel' that's what I like about them they were built to last.
Glad about the shout for the Spotmatic! I’d argue it’s actually a better camera than the K1000, even with the older Spotty’s only having stop-down metering rather than open-aperture. The only reason I say this is the M42 mount. (Also the Spotmatic is just prettier than the K1000 in my humble biased opinion)
Back in 1983 I started my voyage into photography with a Zenit 11 kit (body, 2 lenses, flash and bag}. Several years later I upgraded to a Minolta X700, which I absolutely loved, I then moved on to a Nikon D200 and then a Nikon D5. My dream camera has always been the Nikon F3T HP with MD4
Top end Nikons have frame accurate viewing. 100%. The others, with the exception of the fantastic Canon F1, have fractional viewing. This was very important to some of us at the time... getting EXACTLY, no more or less, than what appeared in the viewfinder.
I picked up the canon ae-1 program on offer up. I got it for a steal! I payed $150 for it and it came with the kit lens 50mm f1.8. and two other lenses. It's going to be my camera for my photography class. I plan on getting the Nikon f3 soon as well. Awesome video!
Actually, the OM-1 did have interchangeable focussing screens. I bought one in 1977 and was fool enough to donate it to a charity shop a few years ago. It was a really nicely engineered little gem. Thanks for the vid! I'm thinking of getting an FE as I'd like to be able to pick up some pre-AI glass.
My student camera in the 80s was a Yashica FX2. As easy to use as the Pentax but a bit if a beast. It also did not have the range of lenses but what they had was sharp. I recommend the OM-1 to new film users for all the great reasons you give. Thanks for the video have a good Christmas holiday.
Thanks for watching, Jaime! I own and love an FX-3 from Yashica. Excellent cameras, and some of those Yashica lenses could keep pace with the Zeiss equivalent! - Connor
The other extraordinary camera that should be on there is the Nikon FA. The only downside is that not as many were made (but there are still a lot on ebay). It has the look/feel of the FM/FE/FM2/FE2/etc. range, 1/4000 shutter, full manual control - but it also added on some amazing new capabilities - program, shutter, and aperture priority availability, ability to work with AI-S lenses , and the world’s first multi pattern evaluative matrix metering, the system upon which all evaluative metering systems today are built. Most advanced manual focus SLR ever made imo.
I agree. I've had Nikons since 1978, with an FM the day they were released. Loved it, and moved up to the FM2, which was a step change. Later, in the early 80s, I could afford the new F3, which was hands down the most beautiful and perfectly engineered camera I'd ever seen. Later, I bought and used a variety of F Photomics, F2A and F2AS bodies. With Nikon, it was difficult to find a bad camera. I've owned F4s and F100s, and once I reluctantly went digital for pro use, it was always going to be Nikon again. I've progressed through the D series until I ended up with the D850 I still use, with a D810 as back up.
I started off with polariods. Then went to digital. Then switched back to polariods. I'm now, slowly entering into 35mm. I just bought my first cam and film and batteries. I just hope I can get 1 good shot out of a whole roll. That's it.
That's a great goal! I'm right there with you, one good shot per roll is really all you can ask for. Anything else is just icing on the cake. (-: - Connor
FE is my favourite on which I can use all my old Nikon glass which the FE2 cannot. Aperture priority too. I use my Nikon D300s digital with all my Nikon lenses. That's the beauty of the Nikon F mount. I have an all black F2a. Pentax Spotmatic is a good choice. Pentax lenses are amazing.
I agree, Neil! The versatility of the F system, to me, more than makes up for it focusing the "wrong" way. It seems many people agree, since the list was 50% Nikon! Thanks for watching! - Connor
Probably because the XD line can fail with a dependency on batteries and the capacitors. I have four XD bodies, one died recently. I guess I can repair it myself by replacing the capacitor. They should have included one of the mechanical Minolta SRTs, if not just for the Minolta glass which is nice and a real steal at the prices they go for.
The XD series, while revolutionary in being the first camera to feature both shutter and aperture priority, just didn't sell well enough at the time. Also, different naming conventions in different regions hurts the results of a search-based list like ours. Thanks for watching! - Connor
Surprisingly no XGM, X700 or even SRT101 on the list. I shot a lot of film & slides with these very robustly built cameras during the 80s/90s and very satisfying experiences
I have never owned or used a Pentax K1000, however, I still own and use several Pentax Spotmatics. Great camera ! I use it as a backup to my more expensive Nikon and Leica cameras.
The olimpus is the odd one out with the shutter speeds around the lens throat. The good thing about this, is that you dont need to take your hand off the lens area to change shutter speed. Similar to the Hasselblad medium format cameras. What really made the Nikon F2 popular was it's use in the Vietnam War showing off it's ruggedness and taking those images in extreme circumstances! My dad had the F2 and I had the FE Great channel!
Thanks, Nordic neighbors! Good, and honest reviews. The list could obviously be lengthened greatly, making an hours-long video. I've owned or now own all presented here. My 3rd camera, and 2nd Japanese SLR, was a new Nikon F with the standard prism, circa 1968, After that, I bought a new Nikkormat EL circa 1974, Nikon's 1st with automatic shutter. I also had the opportunity to use a Hasselblad 500 C for over a year, lent by my former construction crew boss. In 1976, I changed to Canon with a new AE-1 with FD 28mm/2.8 SC, via a Canon employee in Japan. After carrying larger and heavier cameras, I really admired their move to quality plastics and more automation, although now I'm nostalgic for metal cameras. In 1978, I upgraded to a Canon A-1 with FD 50mm/1.4 SSC (probably the best overall performing standard vintage lens). In the mid-1980s, I bought a new Nikon EM, which was fine during my more family snapshot period. I kept the EM longer than any other camera and it did its job and was solid and reliable. Now, my top-three vintage 35mm SLRs include the Canon EF Black Beauty, which was ahead of its time, very solid and has the smoothest film advance of any I've tried. Another favorite is the Leica R5, built on a Minolta XD7/11 chassis. It has all the features I desire, but the lenses are way too expensive, so I'm going to sell it. I tried the Nikon FM2n and found that matching needles or diodes is ridiculous (almost got me run over on a side-street) when and F3, FE or FE2 can do that instantly. I even tried a Nikon FM3a, but why pay mega $$, ££ or €€ for the mental assurance that the everything works without batteries? It didn't impress me much. My personal favorite Nikon is the FE, partly because it can mount pre-AI Nikkor lenses. And, what's up with folks using cameras like the Canon AE-1 in some kind of mechanical mode? We who lived through manual cameras, welcomed the sophisticated new electronics technologies, and even lots of plastic. Now, I've narrowed done my collection of lenses to Canon FD (15-500mm). I also have collected a few Contax Zeiss lenses to go with Yashica Yashinon DX lenses I've extracted from dead Electro 35 models. Those are 35mm/1.8 (with funky space-ship artifacts at certain aperture settings), 40mm/1.7 (my favorite walk-around lens, compact), 45mm/1.7 and--probably my best-performing and sharpest, with creamy bokeh--is the 45mm/1.4. So now, I'm trying to decide between Yashica-Tomioka lenses (more "pop") and Canon FD. I don't like having a bunch of gear I don't use, so I'm selling out everything that I don't tend to use. I use them all on my Sony A7r3, and have adapters for almost every mount. Great video and reviews!
All three of my SLRs I got from my parents or grandparents are on this list, apparently my family had basic taste in cameras lol. I'm not complaining, I have an OM1-N, Nikon FM2, and the K1000. All are nice and compact, I definitely have my eye on an F2. OM1 is my favorite of the lot that I have tried. The viewfinder is amazing.
I would say they had good taste!! The benefit of picking things that sell well or are popular is that there are tons of extra parts, lenses, and bodies available. They can be repaired for decades to come! Thanks for watching. - Connor
Very interesting list. It seems like some folks overlooked the fact that these aren’t your personal favorites, but most searched. I have used a few of those cameras, and they all have many fine qualities. As Nico pointed out, it might be a good idea to check out lens prices before committing to a system. Also, at this late date, the best film camera is the one you can get service and parts for in your country. If any camera is used regularly, you will need repairs.
@@keiga4370 Most people would prefer a camera that works reliably to cameras that don't. If you're looking for a camera that isn't working properly for a creative purpose, there are millions out there! Thanks for watching! - Connor
I bought my Spotmatic not because I want to be cool. I love it’s looks and the era it came from. It was made in simpler times when doing things meant you had to invest time in learning how to use it, no instant satisfaction without the work. It’s a design icon, along the lines of old Volkswagens (manual transmission) and Levi’s 501’s (no zipper) It will carry me through the learning process and give me a chance to create images similar to those who used it when it was new, and put my own creativity from what I learn now into film. I love it, it makes me happy, and if we can inspire others from them seeing us use them, and get them interested in them and away from smartphones, surely that’s a good thing.
I used Nikon FM3a. It was dream camera, especially after zenit-19. Unfortunately, nowdays classic photography is too expensive pleasure in Russia. So, now I use Nikon DF. This one reminds me FM3a.
Strangely, the only one of your top ten SLRs I haven't shot with is the #1... I'll have to try one. Interesting presentation despite the absence of Minolta or Konica. Ah well, it'll keep 'em cheap. Another consideration in the the Spotmatic/K1000 debate is that the Spotmatic has a self timer and (when the meter is engaged) depth of field preview.( Also I love weird old 42mm Soviet glass.) Finally, I must point out that The FM2 FE2 and Olympus OM1 all have changeable focus screens. Cheers!
Thanks for your comment, yeah, we sometimes make mistakes on videos, its never easy to be "on" for 30 mins. But the list is always interesting as it shows what the market talks and searches.
Minolta, Konica, Contax, Olympus OM. Dude, the only cameras they think are the "best" are from 3 brands... the most obvious brands you would think are "the best".
I don’t have any statistics, but I repair and sell cameras in Denmark. I’m pretty sure the Olympus OM10 is the most popular here, every time I put a new on sale it’s gone within a day or two. I have lots of others - Canon, Nikon, Konica, Minolta and others - but the OM10 beats them all.
OM10s don't stick around long here, either! They're great cameras for beginners and advanced amateurs, which is the vast majority of the community these days! - Connor
In the military, I had a few photography friends stationed overseas. Great place to buy the Nikon and Canon cameras as the prices were way lower than in the U.S. I had the F2, my friend had the Canon F1. Both incredible cameras built like tanks. There were too many cameras in the 70s and 80s to account for. Minolta was a big player, Petri is an obscure name for crappy cameras, Pentax was one of the best prosumer cameras, the AE1 sold like hotcakes due to advertising and a good camera for the average Joe. It was a fun time. Film was cheap, processing was cheap, and we had Kodachrome. I will never shut up about that great and best slide film. Kodachrome is not being replicated in digital cameras for its excellent grain quality and bursting off the film colors. No Kodachrome is the reason I no longer do film.
Really enjoyed this video, thanks! My top camera is my Minolta XE-7...a magnificent machine with superb build quality! Part Leica, it still works perfectly every time after 40+ years!
Can believe you miss the Minolta X700 along with the MD Rokkor lenses probably the best of the best in 135mm, lots of professional photographers work horse back in the 80's
Had an FM2 in the '90s and used it for a decade of travel journalism. And in the late e 60s early 70s I had two cameras related to ones you choose here. The Canon TL-QL,cheaper little brother to the FTB. (Couldn't afford the Nikkormat, so the TL had to do.) And a few years later picked up an FTn. All of them great SLRs.
Just to add something to your comments about the Nikon F3HP, there is one caveat to the F3, that being that the exposure memory button has a tandency to snap off internally. When it does, not only is using the exposure memory button difficult (although pushing it in may still work), but it will, literally, fall out of the camera. Nikon modified this after about a year or two of production, and the newer models are less prone to this breakage, but they continued to use a plastic shaft attached to the button, so avoid F3s from the first year or so of production. Other than that, they're absolute tanks. Mine fell when I was ten feet up a ladder. It bounced off the cement floor and landed twenty feet away. Smashed the hell out of the lens, but the body was fine. No damage other than a dinged corner....
I use for years in abuzing police CSI works the Exa1a, Zorky, Praktica mtl3, Practica mtl5, Nikon f3, Sony cybershot H2, Nikon D3100. All this in 30 years of service. Retired about one year and 10 days. From al these the Practica mtl5, and Nikon f3 like the most. Use them on the field and in laboratory also. Nikon D3100 was good also, but somehow i not feel it close like the other two.
I worked in camera stores in the 1970s. Nikon was the leader, so Canon did massive marketing efforts to catch up, including paying salespeople a small cash "spiff" for selling a Canon camera. If you sold 10 Canons in a week, you could make an extra $100, which was a lot at the time. We sold thousands (I think) of Canon FT-b. Late in the 70s, Fuji brought out the ST701, which the folks at my store thought was a better beginner's camera. It was small, very quiet, and the Fuji lenses were amazing. The only downnside was the M42 screwmount lens system. Later, Fuji introduced a proprietary bayonet mount which never gained popularity and probably spelled the end of Fuji SLRs. Fuji's SLRs were first rate personal cameras, not intended for Pros, but their marketing never matched Canon's.
I have the Contarex I bulls eye, with a 50, 25, and the 21. really heavy camera, and almost zero ergonomic, but I can't help to love it's design, although it didn't build base on user, it's how a self-centred camera dream itself to be.
Canon were right. Shutter priority is the right priority. I have a Nikon F2, a Nikon FE, a Pentax K1000 and a Pentax Spotmatic. I don't really use 35m since Kodachrome was discontinued. I use a 1957 Yashica Mat with the 75mm Lumaxar f3.5 lens. Medium format is SOO much better
Being a Canon user, I still have my AE1 and A1 which were both purchased new back in the day. I don't use them anymore, but can't bear to part with them.
The Canon AE-1 had a design weakness that spoiled important pictures for me, but was remedied by the AE-1 Program. That AE-1 problem was that the shutter speed dial projected over the edge of the camera top plate and was spring loaded to turn most easily, if I remember correctly, toward slower shutter speeds. So in a quick-shoot situation such as a lot of photojournalism, I'd bring my AE-1 to my eye and shoot, thinking it was on 1/250 as I had set it, but it had spun to, say, 1/30. Otherwise I loved them. The AE-1 Programs and A1s had no such problem and were excellent. I was covering some guerillas in rural Asia when we were ambushed. I had to dive behind a rice paddy with the Canons hanging off me, hitting so hard that I cracked the pentaprism housing of the AE-1 Program. The pentaprism was pushed down which made it useless for focusing, but because I needed the body for another type of film, I put my 24mm lens on it and shot by zone focusing. The images were perfect. I do so miss the feel, sound, logic and connection with the old film cameras. Digital cameras have become much more capable, but they do not have the film cameras' presence.
Good video but a lot (perhaps too much ? ) of Canon and Nikon… I thought Minolta was also searched (the first models) because they are simple and very reliable (srt101) and give access to a very good line of cheap lenses (Nikon lenses are not so cheap). Same for Pentax I thought the spomatic would have reached the top 10 too. They are so god looking. Anyway inside this list my favorite are Nikon F2 (the rem you made on the position of the shutter on the F explains why I don t like it I guess), the FE2 and the OM1 (I used to ask my friends who love photography to put their eye on the mo1 or om2 viewfinder and I regularly get a wooooaooo amazing it s so large and clear !!! I also like some other film cameras : Canon new F1 (a beast with the AE prism) , Canon T90 (one of the most technical film machine ever made but killed by the autofocus wave), Nikon F100 , Leica R7 (the nicest shutter speed sound) , the Leica R8 (similar too T90 for me), the Contax RTS2 and the very unknown Contax N1.
My first camera was the Canon A-1, I then added an AV-1, and a T-70 In 85 I switched to Nikon with a F3 HP with the MD-4 When I had the A-1, it didn't matter what mode I was in, usually Shutter Priority, I just spun the dial, until either the Shutter Speed, or the f-stop I wanted appeared. When I got the F3 which was Aperture Priority, I would move the Aperture Ring on the lens until I got the Shutter Speed I wanted, or whatever the camera was choosing close to the displayed speed What exactly is your F3? It has a raised shutter speed dial, and a Hot Shoe on the Viewfinder? The AE-1 Program had more in common with the A-1 than it did with the AE-1. The body of the AE-1 Program was basically the A-1 body, which was a lot different than the AE-1 body
The F3 with a hot shoe on finder is the “press” model made for photojournalist. I find that weird when the F3 was the pro model in the first place. Maybe the press version came out a few years later? The hot shoe is pretty much the biggest difference.
@@asmahism The F3P was introduced a few years later in response to feedback from Press photographers! You're right, the main difference is that built-in hot shoe and raised shutter speed dial. Thanks for watching! - Connor
for some reason - in videos like this..the Canon EF is ignored.. I really like this camera and.. while it originally took mercury batteries, it has a voltage regulator in it so modern batteries can be used. oh.. the original Canon F1 is sweet as is the Minolta XK
Thanks for watching! I would say each of the Nikons on this list are wonderfully reliable and repairable, but I agree that having a Minolta on the list would be great! Since this list was driven by user search results, tell your friends to search for the Minoltas! Might drive the prices up a bit, though! - Connor
I like my small Nikons until they break, which seems to happen often. I have a dead FM another developing a film advance issue, a dead FE and EM. Wanted a small camera with Nikons Matrix metering and picked up a clean FA off of eBay for $200. Took a test role came out great next time out shoot another role and the shutter comes apart. My old local camera tech passed so I mailed it off, my $200 now has run me $320 to repair hope it holds up. Now my Olympus OM's have held up much better which surprised me , they don't seem to have Nikons build quality.
missing one more nikon Slr and that would be the awesome FM3A produced til 2006. that is a fully mechanical camera that has Aperture Priority and is built like a tank. $899 and up usually.
An excellent camera, for sure, but produced in such small numbers that it was, by design, a collectors item. This list is driven by user search results and ad data, not by how capable a camera is. Thanks for watching! - Connor
Great video featuring some nice film cameras. I myself own a Zenit 12XP with a Helios 44-M4, a Canon EOS Rebel G, a Smena Symbol, along with a recently acquired Olympus OM-1 and a Pentax K1000. I'm not a purist or a snob and sincerely hope I'm not understood as one, but my pet gripe is that most people getting into film nowadays are doing it for the coolness factor of it. Talking to the camera technicians I know who repair/service these old cameras around where I live reveals that these people are willing to pay exorbitant prices for even the not so nice ones. I'd say almost all of them are from the new generation who wouldn't at all relate to the "nostalgia" of the times they weren't even born in. It is just that in this "Instagram/Tiktok" world, they want to seem cool and don't give two f***s about the history of these incredible machines and science behind film photography at all. Its all about getting a camera from a top 10s list no matter what the price, probably one that has some kind of automation so they don't have to tinker with the manual settings to get good pictures as long as they look cool with the cameras hanging around their necks. I think many people here would agree. But again, not wanting to tick off anyone! Cheers!
@@dann7110 Dude read the comment carefully. Don't be a mindless troll. We are all from the same film shooter community who are vying to keep film alive and kicking. And it seems to me that I have caught the correct pulse about the fake Tiktok/Instagram generation, based on your comment. Bitter truth, eh? Cheers!
@@suchitgangurde3514 reread my comment. It may only be bitter to people like you who boil a "generation" of people down to a phone app. old dogs can't learn new tricks same with the people who said rock and rap music are ruining society cheers!
Hey Suchit! Thanks for watching! While I agree that some element of the community jumps at "hyped" cameras that people on UA-cam or Instagram laud as the greatest cameras ever, I think it's a bit reductive to generalize about people enjoying film photography. The "coolness factor" IS a valid reason to enjoy film photography, whether you like it or not. I talk to people every day who are amazed by the history of cameras, and I talk to people every day who just want the cheapest medium format camera out there because a UA-camr told them medium format is the only thing that can improve their photography. The truth is that we cannot control how people choose to interact with ANY art form. Wanting to look cool with a camera around your neck is a valid reason to buy a camera. Wanting to take out of focus flash photos of your friends at parties is a valid reason to buy a camera. Wanting to take professional portraits is a valid reason to buy a camera. It's not up to us to decide what's "art" and what isn't. Another truth is that the "exorbitant" prices people pay these days still PALE in comparison to what many of these cameras cost new. Did you know a Canon AE-1 with a 50mm f1.8 lens cost the equivalent of $605 in 1985? Pretty wild! Anyway, thanks for watching again. Try to keep an open & equal mind to everyone in our community so that we can all continue to enjoy photography together! - Connor
As with all "resurgence" markets, we have already missed the boat on SLR cameras. The time to buy was ten years ago, when I considered selling my A-1 but didn't because it was worth almost nothing. Yes, the A-1's have increased in value, but they are still underpriced.
Having worked professionally and co-owned a camera store. The bricks, aka, older Nikon and Canons from the late sixties through 70s were work horses that were so much more reliable than the electronic junk That came later. I still use my FTb and F-1 s today! I preferred Canon glass over Nikon. And like Match needle semi spot meter reading over, to me, slower aperture/shutter Priority gimictry. I guess that's a carry over from my love of medium and large format photography. Keep it simple and more personal control. That and Canon bricks kept on working Longer than other brands. Heavy, yes, but that was great for stability, less camera Shake!
The SLRs you are showing are all great cameras. Being from that time we had somewhat different reasons for buying some of these. After picking a lens line first we would pick a body behind it. Most new photographers in the past picked a body and had to make do with the lens line for said body. You mixed pro and amateur and some prosumer cameras. Not a bad idea but not for the pro. I see some awesome cameras and my choice is still my Nikon F3 with an MD12 compact motor drive. Nikon made very useful lenses and way back then many Canon Pros always said - great camera but I would like some Nikon glass on it. The Nikon FM and FE2 were usually purchased due to higher flash sync that could make the difference in getting the shot or not. Most of my editorial work required exciting lighting so electronic flash was was used in many shoots. I am dragging studio flash in cases to the job. Even on a plane. The second reason was that backup cameras never needed the same amount of shutter activations. Pro cameras needed a million activations while most others were rated 125 to 250k activations. I started with Olympus OM1 and OM2. Traveling around weight was an issue. Further, the Olympus had by far the brightest viewfinder. Both equiped with motor winders. Oh, we also sold Canon FTL as well as FTB. Different in minor details but the FTb was considered an upgrade. And sadly, the breech lock was later also changed which makes buying used lenses a bit limited. Nice video again guys.
I know Canon F-1 & New F-1 are not on this list, but I would love to know which one would you prefer over the other! I'm looking to get my first film camera (have used DSLRs before extensively, though I don't have a lens collection atm.) and been considering those or the Nikon F3. Thank you in advance!
I still prefer film! About the only use I have for "Digital Image Capture" is the quick snap-shot with my cell phone! But, for all important images? It's film all the way. But I'm from a Photographer and Photo Studio heritage that started in my family way back in the 19th century. Over 140 years!
I am surprised there were no Minolta SRTs on this list. At one point, it seemed everyone i knew had a Minolta SRT101 and I still use an SRT201 from time to time. Also, I would replace the Minolta X700 with the X570 as it has a much better metered manual. Good list!
That's a great deal! Hopefully the seller had testing equipment to make sure the camera was actually working properly instead of just looking nice. You'd be incredibly surprised how often the nicest-looking cameras have internal issues that only show up when testing with proper equipment. Thanks for watching! - Connor
@Kamerastore I went to KEH so I'm pretty confident. The lens was admittedly in rougher physical condition but everything is functional. This is really great purchasing advice thank you!
Great list !!! I own an Olympus om 1 with the 28/f3.5 and the 75-150/ f4. Do you guys have any suggestions for me about another lenses ? Happy new year btw 😁
How about a nifty fifty! Or even the famous 40mm f2.8 pancake lens! In Olympus, I generally recommend either the 50mm f1.4 or the 100mm f2.8 as great starters. Thanks for watching! - Connor
@@diddi9635 It's a great little lens! Quite close to the eye's natural focal length. I'd say it's the best "carry everywhere" lens that doesn't cost you an arm and a leg! Enjoy it! - Connor
I would get rid of the Nikon FE2 and the FM2 and replace them with the one that has it all plus fully mechanical all the way through to 1/4000 s shutter-> the Nikon FM3A. Then maybe you could also throw in the venerable Canon F1 or a really nice Olympus OM2
As an FM3a user myself, I would probably say yes to your suggestion, but that camera has Leica prices even in Kamerastore, so it's a choice for the more wealthy and more "in the know" photographers. For everyone else, honestly I would suggest either: FM2 is electronics is a worry, and FE2 if you want a super-bright viewfinder and want the needle exposure system of the FM3a.
Buy from us: kamerastore.com/
Sell to us: bit.ly/3tvwMyD
Hands down the prettiest SLR of all time has to be the OM-1. It is about as gorgeous as an inanimate object can be. The design is timeless, and looks as good now as it did when I first lusted after one. And the viewfinder - I've never seen better. These cameras in terms of just beautiful things to look at just beat the pants off of all the newer DSLRs with their shapeless form.
Late comment but to my eyes pentax me/me super has the edge. It's just a tad smaller and hot shoe doesn't ruin the look of it.
OM 1 had interchangable focus screens.
Interchangeable focus screens was definitely a thing with the OM-1. They had a full system for microscopes.
Nikon fm2
I used the Minolta X-700 which was a great camera. We used it in the Army’s 3rd Armored Division’s Public Affairs Office when I was a photographer for them. I carried two, my own and the one I was assigned. I carried a K-1000 in the cold weather caused the batteries to die on me, which happened in Germany in the winter. It’s the main reason I always have a full manual camera with me when I go out shooting pictures. The full manual one I use now is the FM-10. For a light inexpensive camera it’s surprisingly good. I would recommend it as a beginner camera. Up there with the K-1000.
Your excellent presentation was enjoyed by me, but I do have a few comments. I was born 21 FEB 1950 and lived in New York City from 1971 - 1983, so I was literally immersed into the camera scene which you talk about. (I now live in Philadelphia.) Somehow, Kamerastore seems a name bit familiar: some years ago I remember hearing of people in a Scandinavian country trying to amass a great quantity of film cameras (camera rescue?) in order to preserve the film legacy. Is this YOU?
First, the Nikon F2, which supplanted the original F, was really the best clockwork SLR ever created. There, Nikon outdid itself and, as good as the F was, the F2 was, as you imply, the final version of the F with all the bugs ironed out. (I say this while being NOT a great fan of Nikon.) When the F3 came out in 1980, there was a massive effort by professionals to acquire the last F2 cameras. Back then, the outright fear of the reliability of electronic shutters was really intense. Nikon KNEW of this great fear and used maximum engineering effort in order to assuage such fears. The quality of the Nikon F3 was the result of such a great effort and was the primary reason why professionals eventually decided that electronics actually could be reliable.
The somewhat “less” professional FE (2) and FM (2) cameras were also great, but through the years (camera shows, etc) I have seen too many FE (2) SLRs which had inoperative shutters. For me, the FM (2) would have been a far better choice.
You know, Nikormat was also a viable choice for a simply mechanical body (though the EL was electronic). They are really cheap now.
Your omission of both the Minolta SR-T series and the semi-professional XE-5 and XE-7 is rather inexcusable. You speak of a silky smooth film advance for the Nikon F3. Have you ever advanced film on the XE series? The XE bodies are built like tanks. The SR-T is ‘almost’ built like a tank. Back in the 70s, Minolta glass was considered to be ‘almost’ as good as Nikon and Canon. Today, however, Minolta glass is seen for what it truly is: among the best on the planet. Their electronic bodies (X-370, X-700, etc) were not built to the same robust standards as the SR-T and XE-5 (-7), but their glass was stupendous.
Pentax is on your list, but only with the outrageously over played K1000. Yes, it is a very good and reliable simple camera, and Pentax glass is tops. But K1000 has no self-timer like the KX or Spotmatic have. What you omitted, however, is the tiny jewel that is the Pentax MX. If I compare that to the Olympus OM-1, I would opt for the MX, any day. Seemingly similar to the MX were the ME and ME Super. However, the troubles with the electronic shutters on the ME series are legion. This is why the MX is rarely available and is much, much more expensive than those of the ME series. Yes the Olympus OM-1 is a good camera, but far and away too ‘sexy’, too socially optimized, for it to be rationally prioritized as ‘best of the small’.
Canon spent an untold sum of money and engineering effort in order to conceal the fact the the AE-1 had a plastic top cover. Many, today, still do not know that that top cover is plastic! That was how paranoid people were back in 1976 when it was introduced. It is a great camera, really great, but, two years later when the A-1 came out, the A-1 was considered to be an even better camera. But today, the ‘greatness’ attaches solely to the AE-1 (and Program). The A-1 gathers dust. Personally, I think that the A-1 was a case of ‘having too much’ and, thus, was a bit confusing to deal with. Earlier mechanical Canons, (FTb, TL, FX, etc) are truly great SLRs, but with my obsession with making minor repairs on such old beasts, I find that these Canon mechanicals are too over-engineered. Their prism is also prone to fungus problems. Compared with the Pentax Spotmatics, they have twice as many gears, twice as much opportunity to break. Indeed, still with Pentax, I consider the ‘master of simplicity and reliability in consumer SLRs’ to be the predecessors of the Spotmatic: the H1a and SV.
Your speaking about the ultra modern film SLRs (like Canon EOS, Nikon N65, N8008, Minolta Maxxum) was very well put. As much experience as I have with this topic, I still cannot understand how they are so maligned and left to rot. I think that the main reason is the fact that batteries for most of these seemingly cost a fortune. There are exceptions: Minolta Maxxum takes AAA batteries and Nikon N8008 (S) takes the ever-present AA batteries) but most take really costly batteries. That said, there are places online where such batteries are rather affordable (I.e., Battery Junction). But, these SLRs are selling for nothing, so people venturing into this area should strongly consider their real worth. Yes, they are ugly and ‘look digital’, but, in most cases, these ultra-modern SLRs will operate on both auto and full manual, and, to boot, have light meters which are better than on most older SLRs.
Back in the mid 70s I could walk into a NYC photo store in the Camera District (near Herald Square) and pay 63 cents for a 36-exposure roll of Tri-X. No matter how nostalgic your videos are, or no matter how endearingly they are viewed, the current, outrageous price of film is ruining this party for all of us. The film prices never cease to increase. Foreign operations like FOMA might be the only way to salvage this dilemma, because Ilford, Fuji, and (primarily) Kodak have left the realm of rational pricing. The available consumer grades of color C-41 film are now as expensive as the professional versions were just a few years ago. This, more than anything else, is ruining this love of film photography. - David Lyga
Great comments, thanks David - MX is the best 😊
Well said, David. I'm probably around your age, but as a very late bloomer, I became interested in photography (digital) around 20 years ago. It wasn't until January 2021 that I had become interested in 35mm film photography and my wife purchased my first film SLR, the Canon AE-1 for my birthday this year. Since then I have purchased a Nikon F with the Ftn prism head, a Minolta SRT-303, a Nikon FA and the Olympus OM-2SP. As for film prices going through the roof, I totally understand the frustration. However, for me, it's the cost of enjoying my new-found hobby and there are much more expensive hobbies than this.
This guy will show you how to shoot film for 7 cents per picture: ua-cam.com/video/jZ1XJJhGlcg/v-deo.html
I rarely shoot color for 35mm (though I do for medium format and 4x5). For 35mm film cameras mostly it is black and white or fun stuff like infrared and Lomo purple. And I follow Steve O'nion's advice to slow down and not take as many pictures. And when you think of it, the drive to Mount Rainier or other scenic spot to take pictures costs a lot more than the film anyway. Plus the film equipment is a lot cheaper than modern digital stuff. So the money you save on equipment can go into the film and processing.
@@danncorbit3623 Yes, Dann, agreed!
Best comment I’ve ever read. You should start a UA-cam challenge David
Olympus OM cameras have a number of interchangeable focusing screens. I have the OM 2n and 2sp from new. They are flawless. Very large viewfinder magnification.
Came to state exactly this. The smaller size doesn't compromise
The OM-1 viewfinder is not only extremely bright, it also has huge magnification. An OM-2N was my first camera and I still miss it, although I now use an FM2 and Fujifilm digital cameras.
For years the big weakness of the FM2 was its rather grainy viewfinder, and when the FM3a came out, the ability to put a K3 screen on the FM2 improved the camera a lot! 😎
By the way, the FM3a is probably the best of all! It's the only one with a hybrid shutter, which is all mechanical AND all electronic, and it's the only one produced in the XXIst century, which means that it probably won't need the servicing and repair that 40-50 years old cameras need...
OM 1 is a beauty, a workhorse which is easy to handle. I had a Leica R4 and bought the OM as an reserve camera. The OM costed 1/4 the price of R4 and the Zuiko lenses were affordable. I handled the Leica with care but not the OM 1. While the OM 1 never failed (still works) the R4 spent most of its time in the service shop. The Leica R7 was equally bad. (I learned that the Leica R series were nothing but Minolta XD 7) Got rid of the Leica/Summicrons and got myself a OM 2n and OM 4T with its legendary F20 flash. After about 35 odd years these OM cameras still work. Zuiko glasses are compact and as good as the Summicrons. The best portrait lens ever is the compact Zuiko 85 f2.
Got the OM-2n and love it. But I also want the OM-1 because of fully mechanical
Wouldn’t touch a Leica. I get it: people love them and they’re very collectible. I just wonder how many great shots are taken with them, compared to an old Nikon. I used OM-3 and OM-1 cameras professionally. Both had motor drives on them. I still have them but I shoot medium format when I use film. I was told by a camera mechanic not to use the OM-3 because it was too valuable. He told me especially not to use it with the motor drive. I used the 85mm f/2 so often I have 85mm eyes. People say to me, ‘Oh but it’s soft in the centre, you know’. Yeah, I do know. It was designed that way because it’s a portrait lens. The spherical aberration is meant to be there because it’s nicer on skin. Now we have pea brains taking portraits with macro lenses.🙄
@@thethirdman225 I have the Zuiko 85mm f/2 and it is a great lens for its intended use. If you stop it down to 5.6 or 8, then it sharpens up quite a lot and can be used for *other* shots. The background blur can be a little nervous if the subject/background distance is not right, but is otherwise good.
It's a good lens and I'm glad I managed to snag one. Now I need to get my OM-1 out and take it out for a walk. :)
Back in the late 1960s, I purchased a Nikon F 35mm SLR. Later, I purchased an F2, F3, and F4. Today, I still own and use the F2 and F4. The F2 is my favorite manual/mechanical camera. The F4 is my favorite automatic/electronic camera.
I own all 10 on your list- very good choices. In the mechanical realm, one of the most overlooked gems- the Konica auto reflex T3n- probably one of the most satisfying shutters to hear and feel plus the fantastic hexanon glass. Best student camera learning analog photography- the Minolta X-370 hands down. Excellent viewfinder and meter display and also has aperature priority in auto mode. Great little compact camera I reach for all the time when hiking.
True - the X-300/370s are also very cheap and not as heavy as other camera bodies. Therefore an excellent choice for hiking!
I agree with the Konica and Minolta assessments! I've owned 4 Konica Autoreflex cameras (all with minor mechanical flaws) and those lenses are truly superb. And Minolta, I think, represents the best deals in almost every realm of 35mm SLR. Their SRTs are some of the best deals in mechanical cameras, the X-370/X-500/XG-1 are lovely classic-style electronic cameras, and the Dynax/Maxxum line is second to none in AF value. #MinoltaGang all day! Thanks for watching, Tim!
- Connor
Hi, I’m a beginner in film. just curious to know did you ever own the Canon F-1 before? If yes, what are your thoughts?
Bro, this list is absurd. Their whole list is Nikon/Pentax/Canon LOL. Konica and Minolta get no mention, as you pointed out. And where's the Contax RTS and Olympus OM2?? These guys don't know what they're talking about... seems like they just collectively own a bunch of cameras, mostly Canon, Nikon, and Pentax, because that's what they were told was good.
Didnt have any Minoltas on the list though......
Great 35mm SLR selection. However 36 years ago I bought my 1st SLR, a Minolta X-370, i took every where doing 2 to 3 films a week, after 6 months it got damage by a by stander who felt and their beer hit my camera, I decided to get it repair, meanwhile I bought Minolta X-700m this one had the Manual mode, Aperture mode, and full program mode, nice camera, most of the time I use manual mode or aperture mode, afterward few months later I saw a Minolta X-570 on sale, well I bought it to complete the set, The Minolta X-570 became my main camera, because the easy way to use the internal light metering and my favorite modes. The draw back of those camera you need a battery to operate the camera, however you are still able to get those battery very easily on the market today.
I agree! Those lower-end Minolta cameras are excellent bargains and great for shooters of all skill levels! Thanks for watching!
- Connor
Love my X-570...still use it sometimes!
It's cool to see how the current film camera trends are evolving...
Its pretty fascinating, even when one youtube channel talks about certain models, prices go up.
Glad to see the Nikon F, F2, and F3 get some love. They are the only three SLRs I own, which (excluding my phone) represents 75% of all cameras I own (the last camera being a rangefinder).
I started photography at 12 years old in 2001, when film was still king, with the F2, which belonged to my dad at the time. I absolutely love that camera, with my only gripe being that the light meter has died a couple of times on it, which is something to be aware of.
Anyway, I never made the switch to digital, and the only camera I own with an electronically controlled shutter is my F3. I shoot almost exclusively Tri-X nowadays, although from time to time I’ll shoot E6 when I want color (which doesn’t happen often; my photography style tends to be complimented by black and white). I’m not a big fan of C41 film, since I find it harder to scan, given there’s no positive color reference. As stupid as this is, I also just think the negatives look ugly. I develop black and white myself, but have a local lab develop my E6 rolls. I just have them developed and cut into strips so that I can scan them myself
In this video, I owned the Canon AE-1, AE-1 Program, A-1 and the Nikon FE2. I agree that the AE-1 and the AE-1 Program is overrated but it was considered my first and second film SLR so learning film photography on it was great! After doing more research on both cameras, I stumble on an article about the A-1 and got hooked! Your statement "More camera for your money" is spot on! I then wanted to try something that is not "Canon" and in the end I ended up with the Nikon FE2. The reason why I chose that instead of the FM2 is because I want to be able to take a picture quickly without adjusting things as much (Street Photography). Comparing Canon and Nikon, Nikon seems to be more solid, rugged and reliable! Holding the A-1 feels so different after! There is one underrated camera that you guys miss, the Nikon FA. Basically, an A-1 with Matrix Metering and a faster shutter speed. I'm actually interested in getting it myself or maybe the F3, FM3A. But what is your opinion when it comes to the FA?
Very nice list. I own several of them, have used most of them, and have played with all of them at some point. As primarily a Canon shooter since the 70s--and before that, Agfa (yes, an Agfa Karat 36, to be precise, that I STILL use)--it's hard to explain the greater popularity and higher prices of the AE-1 and AE-1P over the A-1. The A-1 has all the features of the other two, plus a better meter, better construction, and a lot more. Much of what we expect from modern cameras today--such as multiple shooting modes, multi-purpose control dials, LED viewfinder info, ergonomics, vertical shutter buttons and instant high-speed mode on motor drives/battery grips, etc.--all originated with the A-1. I can't ding any of your choices, though it would have been nice to see the Canon F-1 among them. Pleasantly surprised to see the FTbQL in there. Oh, and the Nikon FM3A--the last and greatest film SLR from the premier film SLR maker--and that's coming from a lifelong Canon guy.
For anyone curious about the Zeiss Ikon/Nikon F relationship:
The Zeiss Contarex was released during the year prior to the Nikon F, 1958. In 1959 the F basically destroyed it commercially. No doubt Nikon's simpler take on the SLR design influenced it's dominance over the competition.
It's true that the Nikon S rangefinders did share a lot of design elements, including the bayonet mount, with the prewar Contax rangefinders (the model shown in the video is a postwar Contax iiia). It's noteworthy, however, that it was the Leica horizontal curtain shutter mechanism that Nikon chose to incorporate into their cameras, the basic design of which is one of the main functional elements that continued through to the F camera line. Not very much contax survived the transition from SP to F, and what remained didn't last long. Yet the Leica style shutter configuration, in electronically governed titanium form, remained in production until the F3 was discontinued in 2001.
I just picked up a Canon T70. Not because it's the best in any way, but I just love that 80s aesthetic and the super crunchy electronic sounds it makes. And they are very very cheap.
I agree, Saman, there's something so satisfying about the chunky electronic whirs and buzzes that come out of the T series cameras. The aesthetics are definitely polarizing, but I'm glad to see I'm not the only one who loves them. I had a Canon T80 for a long time that I particularly loved. It's the only camera I know with a cross-shaped split prism rather than just a horizontal or diagonal one. I found it SO easy to focus! Thanks for watching!
- Connor
All great 35mm film SLR's. One thing about the older film SLR's (Nikon F series in particular) is the robust build quality they were built to take a beating 'back in the day'. I have a Nikon F with the Ftn prism finder circa 1971 and the thing is literally 'built like a tank'. Very little plastic and compared to later SLR's yes it feels quite heavy you know you have a hunk of camera hanging from your neck. And most of the older film SLR's have that 'substantial feel' that's what I like about them they were built to last.
My go to camera’s are the Pentax Spotmatic and the little MX. they are awesome. I also have a KX. Which is nice too.
Glad about the shout for the Spotmatic! I’d argue it’s actually a better camera than the K1000, even with the older Spotty’s only having stop-down metering rather than open-aperture. The only reason I say this is the M42 mount. (Also the Spotmatic is just prettier than the K1000 in my humble biased opinion)
Back in 1983 I started my voyage into photography with a Zenit 11 kit (body, 2 lenses, flash and bag}. Several years later I upgraded to a Minolta X700, which I absolutely loved, I then moved on to a Nikon D200 and then a Nikon D5. My dream camera has always been the Nikon F3T HP with MD4
Top end Nikons have frame accurate viewing. 100%. The others, with the exception of the fantastic Canon F1, have fractional viewing. This was very important to some of us at the time... getting EXACTLY, no more or less, than what appeared in the viewfinder.
I picked up the canon ae-1 program on offer up. I got it for a steal! I payed $150 for it and it came with the kit lens 50mm f1.8. and two other lenses. It's going to be my camera for my photography class. I plan on getting the Nikon f3 soon as well. Awesome video!
Enjoy your AE-1P! Thanks for watching!
- Connor
Actually, the OM-1 did have interchangeable focussing screens. I bought one in 1977 and was fool enough to donate it to a charity shop a few years ago. It was a really nicely engineered little gem. Thanks for the vid! I'm thinking of getting an FE as I'd like to be able to pick up some pre-AI glass.
My student camera in the 80s was a Yashica FX2. As easy to use as the Pentax but a bit if a beast. It also did not have the range of lenses but what they had was sharp. I recommend the OM-1 to new film users for all the great reasons you give. Thanks for the video have a good Christmas holiday.
I use my Yashica FX2 with Zeiss lenses bought for my Contax 139 Quartz - brilliant.
Thanks for watching, Jaime! I own and love an FX-3 from Yashica. Excellent cameras, and some of those Yashica lenses could keep pace with the Zeiss equivalent!
- Connor
The other extraordinary camera that should be on there is the Nikon FA. The only downside is that not as many were made (but there are still a lot on ebay). It has the look/feel of the FM/FE/FM2/FE2/etc. range, 1/4000 shutter, full manual control - but it also added on some amazing new capabilities - program, shutter, and aperture priority availability, ability to work with AI-S lenses , and the world’s first multi pattern evaluative matrix metering, the system upon which all evaluative metering systems today are built. Most advanced manual focus SLR ever made imo.
I agree. I've had Nikons since 1978, with an FM the day they were released. Loved it, and moved up to the FM2, which was a step change. Later, in the early 80s, I could afford the new F3, which was hands down the most beautiful and perfectly engineered camera I'd ever seen. Later, I bought and used a variety of F Photomics, F2A and F2AS bodies. With Nikon, it was difficult to find a bad camera. I've owned F4s and F100s, and once I reluctantly went digital for pro use, it was always going to be Nikon again. I've progressed through the D series until I ended up with the D850 I still use, with a D810 as back up.
FYI the OM series do have interchangeable focusing screens, even without interchangeable finders.
Taking me down memory lane. I remember when most of these came out and I them on my wish list.
I started off with polariods. Then went to digital. Then switched back to polariods. I'm now, slowly entering into 35mm. I just bought my first cam and film and batteries. I just hope I can get 1 good shot out of a whole roll. That's it.
That's a great goal! I'm right there with you, one good shot per roll is really all you can ask for. Anything else is just icing on the cake. (-:
- Connor
FE is my favourite on which I can use all my old Nikon glass which the FE2 cannot. Aperture priority too.
I use my Nikon D300s digital with all my Nikon lenses. That's the beauty of the Nikon F mount.
I have an all black F2a.
Pentax Spotmatic is a good choice.
Pentax lenses are amazing.
I agree, Neil! The versatility of the F system, to me, more than makes up for it focusing the "wrong" way. It seems many people agree, since the list was 50% Nikon! Thanks for watching!
- Connor
Surprised not to see Minolta in there with their XD series. Great performance in a compact form, and great value lenses.
Probably because the XD line can fail with a dependency on batteries and the capacitors. I have four XD bodies, one died recently. I guess I can repair it myself by replacing the capacitor.
They should have included one of the mechanical Minolta SRTs, if not just for the Minolta glass which is nice and a real steal at the prices they go for.
The XD series, while revolutionary in being the first camera to feature both shutter and aperture priority, just didn't sell well enough at the time. Also, different naming conventions in different regions hurts the results of a search-based list like ours. Thanks for watching!
- Connor
@@Kamerastore Irrelevant. It's one of the best ever and you just have to search for XD, not XD 7, 11... Unsubscribing
@@ciprianoravet I'm gonna buy a new phone from Argos because you said that
Surprisingly no XGM, X700 or even SRT101 on the list. I shot a lot of film & slides with these very robustly built cameras during the 80s/90s and very satisfying experiences
I have never owned or used a Pentax K1000, however, I still own and use several Pentax Spotmatics. Great camera ! I use it as a backup to my more expensive Nikon and Leica cameras.
The olimpus is the odd one out with the shutter speeds around the lens throat.
The good thing about this, is that you dont need to take your hand off the lens area to change shutter speed.
Similar to the Hasselblad medium format cameras.
What really made the Nikon F2 popular was it's use in the Vietnam War showing off it's ruggedness and taking those images in extreme circumstances!
My dad had the F2 and I had the FE
Great channel!
Thanks, Nordic neighbors! Good, and honest reviews. The list could obviously be lengthened greatly, making an hours-long video. I've owned or now own all presented here. My 3rd camera, and 2nd Japanese SLR, was a new Nikon F with the standard prism, circa 1968, After that, I bought a new Nikkormat EL circa 1974, Nikon's 1st with automatic shutter. I also had the opportunity to use a Hasselblad 500 C for over a year, lent by my former construction crew boss. In 1976, I changed to Canon with a new AE-1 with FD 28mm/2.8 SC, via a Canon employee in Japan.
After carrying larger and heavier cameras, I really admired their move to quality plastics and more automation, although now I'm nostalgic for metal cameras. In 1978, I upgraded to a Canon A-1 with FD 50mm/1.4 SSC (probably the best overall performing standard vintage lens). In the mid-1980s, I bought a new Nikon EM, which was fine during my more family snapshot period. I kept the EM longer than any other camera and it did its job and was solid and reliable.
Now, my top-three vintage 35mm SLRs include the Canon EF Black Beauty, which was ahead of its time, very solid and has the smoothest film advance of any I've tried. Another favorite is the Leica R5, built on a Minolta XD7/11 chassis. It has all the features I desire, but the lenses are way too expensive, so I'm going to sell it. I tried the Nikon FM2n and found that matching needles or diodes is ridiculous (almost got me run over on a side-street) when and F3, FE or FE2 can do that instantly. I even tried a Nikon FM3a, but why pay mega $$, ££ or €€ for the mental assurance that the everything works without batteries? It didn't impress me much. My personal favorite Nikon is the FE, partly because it can mount pre-AI Nikkor lenses. And, what's up with folks using cameras like the Canon AE-1 in some kind of mechanical mode? We who lived through manual cameras, welcomed the sophisticated new electronics technologies, and even lots of plastic.
Now, I've narrowed done my collection of lenses to Canon FD (15-500mm). I also have collected a few Contax Zeiss lenses to go with Yashica Yashinon DX lenses I've extracted from dead Electro 35 models. Those are 35mm/1.8 (with funky space-ship artifacts at certain aperture settings), 40mm/1.7 (my favorite walk-around lens, compact), 45mm/1.7 and--probably my best-performing and sharpest, with creamy bokeh--is the 45mm/1.4. So now, I'm trying to decide between Yashica-Tomioka lenses (more "pop") and Canon FD. I don't like having a bunch of gear I don't use, so I'm selling out everything that I don't tend to use. I use them all on my Sony A7r3, and have adapters for almost every mount.
Great video and reviews!
Nice, I got a K1000, a Nikon F3, and a Canon FTB. Love them all for different reasons. I also have an Olympus OM-G that I love. Yay film cameras!
All three of my SLRs I got from my parents or grandparents are on this list, apparently my family had basic taste in cameras lol. I'm not complaining, I have an OM1-N, Nikon FM2, and the K1000. All are nice and compact, I definitely have my eye on an F2. OM1 is my favorite of the lot that I have tried. The viewfinder is amazing.
I would say they had good taste!! The benefit of picking things that sell well or are popular is that there are tons of extra parts, lenses, and bodies available. They can be repaired for decades to come! Thanks for watching.
- Connor
Very interesting list. It seems like some folks overlooked the fact that these aren’t your personal favorites, but most searched. I have used a few of those cameras, and they all have many fine qualities. As Nico pointed out, it might be a good idea to check out lens prices before committing to a system. Also, at this late date, the best film camera is the one you can get service and parts for in your country. If any camera is used regularly, you will need repairs.
Great points, Jon! We agree, and providing people with well-serviced SLRs is one of our top priorities! Thanks for watching!
- Connor
@@Kamerastore Well... sometimes perhaps overserviced? You don't really need perfectly working vintage film cameras to take interesting photos....
@@keiga4370 Most people would prefer a camera that works reliably to cameras that don't. If you're looking for a camera that isn't working properly for a creative purpose, there are millions out there! Thanks for watching!
- Connor
I bought my Spotmatic not because I want to be cool. I love it’s looks and the era it came from. It was made in simpler times when doing things meant you had to invest time in learning how to use it, no instant satisfaction without the work. It’s a design icon, along the lines of old Volkswagens (manual transmission) and Levi’s 501’s (no zipper)
It will carry me through the learning process and give me a chance to create images similar to those who used it when it was new, and put my own creativity from what I learn now into film.
I love it, it makes me happy, and if we can inspire others from them seeing us use them, and get them interested in them and away from smartphones, surely that’s a good thing.
I used Nikon FM3a. It was dream camera, especially after zenit-19. Unfortunately, nowdays classic photography is too expensive pleasure in Russia. So, now I use Nikon DF. This one reminds me FM3a.
We used the Pentax k1000 in photography class 7th grade back in 1977.
Fine camera
Its a simple but capable camera, specially when getting the basic knowledge.
Nikon F has mirror lockup. The Nikon FM and FM2 lockup the mirror when using the timer. Great feature for astrophotography and telephoto shots.
Strangely, the only one of your top ten SLRs I haven't shot with is the #1... I'll have to try one. Interesting presentation despite the absence of Minolta or Konica. Ah well, it'll keep 'em cheap. Another consideration in the the Spotmatic/K1000 debate is that the Spotmatic has a self timer and (when the meter is engaged) depth of field preview.( Also I love weird old 42mm Soviet glass.) Finally, I must point out that The FM2 FE2 and Olympus OM1 all have changeable focus screens. Cheers!
Thanks for your comment, yeah, we sometimes make mistakes on videos, its never easy to be "on" for 30 mins. But the list is always interesting as it shows what the market talks and searches.
Minolta, Konica, Contax, Olympus OM. Dude, the only cameras they think are the "best" are from 3 brands... the most obvious brands you would think are "the best".
I don’t have any statistics, but I repair and sell cameras in Denmark. I’m pretty sure the Olympus OM10 is the most popular here, every time I put a new on sale it’s gone within a day or two. I have lots of others - Canon, Nikon, Konica, Minolta and others - but the OM10 beats them all.
OM10s don't stick around long here, either! They're great cameras for beginners and advanced amateurs, which is the vast majority of the community these days!
- Connor
Glad to see you included the Canon A1 which some other film camera viewers omit. This was my first SLR film camera purchase.
In the military, I had a few photography friends stationed overseas. Great place to buy the Nikon and Canon cameras as the prices were way lower than in the U.S. I had the F2, my friend had the Canon F1. Both incredible cameras built like tanks. There were too many cameras in the 70s and 80s to account for. Minolta was a big player, Petri is an obscure name for crappy cameras, Pentax was one of the best prosumer cameras, the AE1 sold like hotcakes due to advertising and a good camera for the average Joe. It was a fun time. Film was cheap, processing was cheap, and we had Kodachrome. I will never shut up about that great and best slide film. Kodachrome is not being replicated in digital cameras for its excellent grain quality and bursting off the film colors. No Kodachrome is the reason I no longer do film.
Really enjoyed this video, thanks! My top camera is my Minolta XE-7...a magnificent machine with superb build quality! Part Leica, it still works perfectly every time after 40+ years!
A great camera, Jay! I've always been a fan of the design of the XE cameras. #MinoltaGang! Thanks for watching!
- Connor
Can believe you miss the Minolta X700 along with the MD Rokkor lenses probably the best of the best in 135mm, lots of professional photographers work horse back in the 80's
I'm using the Yashica FX3 Super 2000. Small compact and easy to use. Full mechanic and reliable.
You CAN change the focusing screens in the Olympus OM1, Nikon FM and FE cameras.
As well as the Minolta X-570 and X-700, I believe
Had an FM2 in the '90s and used it for a decade of travel journalism. And in the late e 60s early 70s I had two cameras related to ones you choose here. The Canon TL-QL,cheaper little brother to the FTB. (Couldn't afford the Nikkormat, so the TL had to do.) And a few years later picked up an FTn. All of them great SLRs.
I've
1. Nikon FM2
2. Pentax K1000 and
3. Yashika Electro 35
In running condition.
i love Minolta X500, X300, x700 and SRT 303b, XE-5
Great choices! #MinoltaGang !
- Connor
Just to add something to your comments about the Nikon F3HP, there is one caveat to the F3, that being that the exposure memory button has a tandency to snap off internally. When it does, not only is using the exposure memory button difficult (although pushing it in may still work), but it will, literally, fall out of the camera. Nikon modified this after about a year or two of production, and the newer models are less prone to this breakage, but they continued to use a plastic shaft attached to the button, so avoid F3s from the first year or so of production. Other than that, they're absolute tanks. Mine fell when I was ten feet up a ladder. It bounced off the cement floor and landed twenty feet away. Smashed the hell out of the lens, but the body was fine. No damage other than a dinged corner....
Canon A1 and Olympus OM-1 for me, both beautiful to use and look at 👌🏼😍
Fascinating trip down memory lane for me ! I used to own an A1 loved it, but I also really liked the iconic look of the F2 !
Thanks for watching, Andy! Both the F2 and A-1 are excellent looking cameras for sure!
- Connor
I use for years in abuzing police CSI works the Exa1a, Zorky, Praktica mtl3, Practica mtl5, Nikon f3, Sony cybershot H2, Nikon D3100. All this in 30 years of service. Retired about one year and 10 days.
From al these the Practica mtl5, and Nikon f3 like the most. Use them on the field and in laboratory also. Nikon D3100 was good also, but somehow i not feel it close like the other two.
I worked in camera stores in the 1970s. Nikon was the leader, so Canon did massive marketing efforts to catch up, including paying salespeople a small cash "spiff" for selling a Canon camera. If you sold 10 Canons in a week, you could make an extra $100, which was a lot at the time.
We sold thousands (I think) of Canon FT-b.
Late in the 70s, Fuji brought out the ST701, which the folks at my store thought was a better beginner's camera. It was small, very quiet, and the Fuji lenses were amazing. The only downnside was the M42 screwmount lens system.
Later, Fuji introduced a proprietary bayonet mount which never gained popularity and probably spelled the end of Fuji SLRs. Fuji's SLRs were first rate personal cameras, not intended for Pros, but their marketing never matched Canon's.
OM-1 did have interchangeable focusing screens. You access them through the lens mount.
The Nikon F has always been my favorite camera of all time.
I have the Contarex I bulls eye, with a 50, 25, and the 21. really heavy camera, and almost zero ergonomic, but I can't help to love it's design, although it didn't build base on user, it's how a self-centred camera dream itself to be.
More of this please. Rangefinders, medium format, compacts…
Yes sir! More is coming your way! Thanks for watching!
- Connor
Canon were right. Shutter priority is the right priority.
I have a Nikon F2, a Nikon FE, a Pentax K1000 and a Pentax Spotmatic. I don't really use 35m since Kodachrome was discontinued.
I use a 1957 Yashica Mat with the 75mm Lumaxar f3.5 lens. Medium format is SOO much better
Being a Canon user, I still have my AE1 and A1 which were both purchased new back in the day. I don't use them anymore, but can't bear to part with them.
Damn, that thumbnail looks good!
Great selection and brief explanation of cameras
Thanks for watching, Ronald!
- Connor
Nice list. No matter what order you made your list it would be correct.
Thanks for watching Michael!
- Connor
Awesome video! I happen to have both of the first and last cameras on the list, in those exact same colors. Woop!
Awesome! Thanks for watching!
- Connor
The Canon AE-1 had a design weakness that spoiled important pictures for me, but was remedied by the AE-1 Program. That AE-1 problem was that the shutter speed dial projected over the edge of the camera top plate and was spring loaded to turn most easily, if I remember correctly, toward slower shutter speeds. So in a quick-shoot situation such as a lot of photojournalism, I'd bring my AE-1 to my eye and shoot, thinking it was on 1/250 as I had set it, but it had spun to, say, 1/30. Otherwise I loved them. The AE-1 Programs and A1s had no such problem and were excellent.
I was covering some guerillas in rural Asia when we were ambushed. I had to dive behind a rice paddy with the Canons hanging off me, hitting so hard that I cracked the pentaprism housing of the AE-1 Program. The pentaprism was pushed down which made it useless for focusing, but because I needed the body for another type of film, I put my 24mm lens on it and shot by zone focusing. The images were perfect.
I do so miss the feel, sound, logic and connection with the old film cameras. Digital cameras have become much more capable, but they do not have the film cameras' presence.
Good video but a lot (perhaps too much ? ) of Canon and Nikon… I thought Minolta was also searched (the first models) because they are simple and very reliable (srt101) and give access to a very good line of cheap lenses (Nikon lenses are not so cheap). Same for Pentax I thought the spomatic would have reached the top 10 too. They are so god looking. Anyway inside this list my favorite are Nikon F2 (the rem you made on the position of the shutter on the F explains why I don t like it I guess), the FE2 and the OM1 (I used to ask my friends who love photography to put their eye on the mo1 or om2 viewfinder and I regularly get a wooooaooo amazing it s so large and clear !!! I also like some other film cameras : Canon new F1 (a beast with the AE prism) , Canon T90 (one of the most technical film machine ever made but killed by the autofocus wave), Nikon F100 , Leica R7 (the nicest shutter speed sound) , the Leica R8 (similar too T90 for me), the Contax RTS2 and the very unknown Contax N1.
My first camera was the Canon A-1, I then added an AV-1, and a T-70
In 85 I switched to Nikon with a F3 HP with the MD-4
When I had the A-1, it didn't matter what mode I was in, usually Shutter Priority, I just spun the dial, until either the Shutter Speed, or the f-stop I wanted appeared. When I got the F3 which was Aperture Priority, I would move the Aperture Ring on the lens until I got the Shutter Speed I wanted, or whatever the camera was choosing close to the displayed speed
What exactly is your F3? It has a raised shutter speed dial, and a Hot Shoe on the Viewfinder?
The AE-1 Program had more in common with the A-1 than it did with the AE-1. The body of the AE-1 Program was basically the A-1 body, which was a lot different than the AE-1 body
The F3 with a hot shoe on finder is the “press” model made for photojournalist. I find that weird when the F3 was the pro model in the first place. Maybe the press version came out a few years later? The hot shoe is pretty much the biggest difference.
@@asmahism The F3P was introduced a few years later in response to feedback from Press photographers! You're right, the main difference is that built-in hot shoe and raised shutter speed dial. Thanks for watching!
- Connor
Great list but you missed the Olympus OM2 with it's OTF exposure metering. It's battery dependent but exposure metering needs an honorable mention.
Highly surprised that there's no minolta camera on the desk especially the x-700.
Thank for sharing.
Minolta has always been a long forgotten, we assume the fact that they died as a brand create a smaller amount of searches overall.
@@Kamerastore I didn't realize this was based on searches when I posted.
Thanks for the response. All nice cameras.
for some reason - in videos like this..the Canon EF is ignored.. I really like this camera and.. while it originally took mercury batteries, it has a voltage regulator in it so modern batteries can be used. oh.. the original Canon F1 is sweet as is the Minolta XK
The Canon EF is hard to show on search results as it blends with the later EF cameras, but its my personal favourite FD camera - Nico.
The Olympus OM1 and OM2 are the most beautiful cameras ever made. Maitani was a superstar designer. They still work perfectly today in 2024
The OM-1 DOES take interchangeable focusing screens.
Sad that the Minolta X-570/X-500 is not on the list but some less reliable and ancient Nikons are on the list
Thanks for watching! I would say each of the Nikons on this list are wonderfully reliable and repairable, but I agree that having a Minolta on the list would be great! Since this list was driven by user search results, tell your friends to search for the Minoltas! Might drive the prices up a bit, though!
- Connor
The Canon A1 has superior metering to the AE1 it meters up to 30 seconds so is great for low light photography.
I like my small Nikons until they break, which seems to happen often. I have a dead FM another developing a film advance issue, a dead FE and EM. Wanted a small camera with Nikons Matrix metering and picked up a clean FA off of eBay for $200. Took a test role came out great next time out shoot another role and the shutter comes apart. My old local camera tech passed so I mailed it off, my $200 now has run me $320 to repair hope it holds up. Now my Olympus OM's have held up much better which surprised me , they don't seem to have Nikons build quality.
missing one more nikon Slr and that would be the awesome FM3A produced til 2006. that is a fully mechanical camera that has Aperture Priority and is built like a tank. $899 and up usually.
An excellent camera, for sure, but produced in such small numbers that it was, by design, a collectors item. This list is driven by user search results and ad data, not by how capable a camera is. Thanks for watching!
- Connor
The OM 1 comes with interchangeable focusing screen.
the AE1 Program was my first slr 1987, then Nikon f301 and Nikon FE2, F 90x, then i went to 120... 🙂
Great video featuring some nice film cameras.
I myself own a Zenit 12XP with a Helios 44-M4, a Canon EOS Rebel G, a Smena Symbol, along with a recently acquired Olympus OM-1 and a Pentax K1000.
I'm not a purist or a snob and sincerely hope I'm not understood as one, but my pet gripe is that most people getting into film nowadays are doing it for the coolness factor of it. Talking to the camera technicians I know who repair/service these old cameras around where I live reveals that these people are willing to pay exorbitant prices for even the not so nice ones. I'd say almost all of them are from the new generation who wouldn't at all relate to the "nostalgia" of the times they weren't even born in. It is just that in this "Instagram/Tiktok" world, they want to seem cool and don't give two f***s about the history of these incredible machines and science behind film photography at all.
Its all about getting a camera from a top 10s list no matter what the price, probably one that has some kind of automation so they don't have to tinker with the manual settings to get good pictures as long as they look cool with the cameras hanging around their necks.
I think many people here would agree. But again, not wanting to tick off anyone!
Cheers!
Ok camera gatekeeper
@@dann7110 Dude read the comment carefully. Don't be a mindless troll. We are all from the same film shooter community who are vying to keep film alive and kicking.
And it seems to me that I have caught the correct pulse about the fake Tiktok/Instagram generation, based on your comment. Bitter truth, eh?
Cheers!
@@suchitgangurde3514 reread my comment. It may only be bitter to people like you who boil a "generation" of people down to a phone app. old dogs can't learn new tricks same with the people who said rock and rap music are ruining society
cheers!
Hey Suchit! Thanks for watching!
While I agree that some element of the community jumps at "hyped" cameras that people on UA-cam or Instagram laud as the greatest cameras ever, I think it's a bit reductive to generalize about people enjoying film photography. The "coolness factor" IS a valid reason to enjoy film photography, whether you like it or not. I talk to people every day who are amazed by the history of cameras, and I talk to people every day who just want the cheapest medium format camera out there because a UA-camr told them medium format is the only thing that can improve their photography.
The truth is that we cannot control how people choose to interact with ANY art form. Wanting to look cool with a camera around your neck is a valid reason to buy a camera. Wanting to take out of focus flash photos of your friends at parties is a valid reason to buy a camera. Wanting to take professional portraits is a valid reason to buy a camera. It's not up to us to decide what's "art" and what isn't.
Another truth is that the "exorbitant" prices people pay these days still PALE in comparison to what many of these cameras cost new. Did you know a Canon AE-1 with a 50mm f1.8 lens cost the equivalent of $605 in 1985? Pretty wild!
Anyway, thanks for watching again. Try to keep an open & equal mind to everyone in our community so that we can all continue to enjoy photography together!
- Connor
I just bought a pristine Pentax SP Spotmatic from Japan now in 2024. I bought a new one in 1969 for a photography class..
Olympus OM1n is a fantastic travel camera.
As with all "resurgence" markets, we have already missed the boat on SLR cameras. The time to buy was ten years ago, when I considered selling my A-1 but didn't because it was worth almost nothing. Yes, the A-1's have increased in value, but they are still underpriced.
Olympus has interchangable focusing screens and is a exhaustive complete system.
The FM2n and FM still work at -40F. The expedition camera in my opinion.
Having worked professionally and co-owned a camera store.
The bricks, aka, older Nikon and Canons from the late sixties through 70s
were work horses that were so much more reliable than the electronic junk
That came later.
I still use my FTb and F-1 s today! I preferred Canon glass over Nikon. And like
Match needle semi spot meter reading over, to me, slower aperture/shutter
Priority gimictry.
I guess that's a carry over from my love of medium and large format photography.
Keep it simple and more personal control. That and Canon bricks kept on working
Longer than other brands. Heavy, yes, but that was great for stability, less camera
Shake!
The SLRs you are showing are all great cameras. Being from that time we had somewhat different reasons for buying some of these. After picking a lens line first we would pick a body behind it. Most new photographers in the past picked a body and had to make do with the lens line for said body.
You mixed pro and amateur and some prosumer cameras. Not a bad idea but not for the pro. I see some awesome cameras and my choice is still my Nikon F3 with an MD12 compact motor drive. Nikon made very useful lenses and way back then many Canon Pros always said - great camera but I would like some Nikon glass on it.
The Nikon FM and FE2 were usually purchased due to higher flash sync that could make the difference in getting the shot or not. Most of my editorial work required exciting lighting so electronic flash was was used in many shoots. I am dragging studio flash in cases to the job. Even on a plane. The second reason was that backup cameras never needed the same amount of shutter activations. Pro cameras needed a million activations while most others were rated 125 to 250k activations.
I started with Olympus OM1 and OM2. Traveling around weight was an issue. Further, the Olympus had by far the brightest viewfinder. Both equiped with motor winders.
Oh, we also sold Canon FTL as well as FTB. Different in minor details but the FTb was considered an upgrade. And sadly, the breech lock was later also changed which makes buying used lenses a bit limited.
Nice video again guys.
I know Canon F-1 & New F-1 are not on this list, but I would love to know which one would you prefer over the other!
I'm looking to get my first film camera (have used DSLRs before extensively, though I don't have a lens collection atm.) and been considering those or the Nikon F3. Thank you in advance!
I still prefer film!
About the only use I have for "Digital Image Capture" is the quick snap-shot with my cell phone!
But, for all important images?
It's film all the way. But I'm from a Photographer and Photo Studio heritage that started in my family way back in the 19th century. Over 140 years!
Nikon FE2 is my fave
I am surprised there were no Minolta SRTs on this list. At one point, it seemed everyone i knew had a Minolta SRT101 and I still use an SRT201 from time to time. Also, I would replace the Minolta X700 with the X570 as it has a much better metered manual. Good list!
I got my a1 for $75 it's in near mint condition besides the battery door and it came with a 50mm 1.4 canon fd lens
That's a great deal! Hopefully the seller had testing equipment to make sure the camera was actually working properly instead of just looking nice. You'd be incredibly surprised how often the nicest-looking cameras have internal issues that only show up when testing with proper equipment. Thanks for watching!
- Connor
@Kamerastore I went to KEH so I'm pretty confident. The lens was admittedly in rougher physical condition but everything is functional. This is really great purchasing advice thank you!
Great list !!! I own an Olympus om 1 with the 28/f3.5 and the 75-150/ f4. Do you guys have any suggestions for me about another lenses ? Happy new year btw 😁
How about a nifty fifty! Or even the famous 40mm f2.8 pancake lens! In Olympus, I generally recommend either the 50mm f1.4 or the 100mm f2.8 as great starters. Thanks for watching!
- Connor
@@Kamerastore yes in fact today i get the 50/f1.8 is it good? Any advices?
@@diddi9635 It's a great little lens! Quite close to the eye's natural focal length. I'd say it's the best "carry everywhere" lens that doesn't cost you an arm and a leg! Enjoy it!
- Connor
@@Kamerastore thanks I'm gonna do it
Hey, I enjoyed that. Good viewing. Thanks for making and sharing this.
Thanks for watching, Barry!
- Connor
I would love to own a Canon F1 (original model) and/or a Canon Ftb.
Both excellent cameras! I took my F-1 out in -10ºC today for a walk on our frozen lake! Thanks for watching, Henry!
- Connor
@@Kamerastore Wow! That’s cold! I’m sure you got some nice pics, though. Don’t walk on thin ice! LOL!
I would get rid of the Nikon FE2 and the FM2 and replace them with the one that has it all plus fully mechanical all the way through to 1/4000 s shutter-> the Nikon FM3A. Then maybe you could also throw in the venerable Canon F1 or a really nice Olympus OM2
As an FM3a user myself, I would probably say yes to your suggestion, but that camera has Leica prices even in Kamerastore, so it's a choice for the more wealthy and more "in the know" photographers. For everyone else, honestly I would suggest either: FM2 is electronics is a worry, and FE2 if you want a super-bright viewfinder and want the needle exposure system of the FM3a.
Konica Autoreflex T3 is best, and so is its glass, Hello?
Thank you, you told the story of my life! ;)
i was able to change the focus from ring to spliton my om1.