Difference between revisions of "User:Dustin McAmera"

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(Hid some of the less interesting text as comments. Deleted some of the to-do list that I've done. Deleted some more that I never will do.)
m (New to-do list: More)
 
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==About me==
 
Hello!  
 
Hello!  
  
My real name is Pete; on here and on Flickr I'm Dustin McAmera. I live in Leeds, in England.
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I live in England. I resist the idea that I'm a collector, but I have more cameras than I can do justice to as a user (a few dozen). That said, the pleasure of using my cameras is sometimes just as important to me as the photographs. My oldest cameras are from the 1920s, but I like to try to write about earlier stuff.
  
I have more cameras than I can do justice to as a user (a few dozen), but I resist the idea that I'm a collector. That said, the pleasure of using the cameras is sometimes just as important to me as the photographs. My oldest cameras are from the 1920s, but I like to try to write about earlier stuff, just because it's under-represented here.
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My own cameras include several that I feel guilty for owning, because they're so good, and I use them so little: in no particular order, my [[Graflex_Speed_Graphic|Century Graphic]]; [[M645 Pro|Mamiya 645 Pro]] ; [[Ensign Reflex]]; [[Agfa Standard]] 208 (9x12 cm); [[Calumet CC-401]] 4x5-inch monorail; and quarter-plate [[Speed Ensign]].  
  
My own cameras include several that I feel guilty for owning, because I use them so little: in particular my [[Graflex_Speed_Graphic|Century Graphic]], my [[M645 Pro|Mamiya 645 Pro]] and my [[Ensign Reflex]]. I notice that since I started editing on here, that problem is worse.
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An important one is a [[Canon EOS M50]]; life nowadays gets in the way of doing much with film, so got this, my first modern digital, to keep a toe-hold on some photography. It's not the same; but I have come to love it; particularly how it keeps going in the dark.  
  
Quite a few of my cameras are for [[127 film]], and I usually do something for 127 Day in July and January (July 2011 was bad; I wasted two rolls of Macocolor discovering a shutter fault in my [[Foth Derby]]). I took part in a 7th December 127 Day last year, one I haven't done before; much the same experience as the January one; not enough time with daylight, and the weather was foul; but it's good to get any photography done in the deep winter. For 7 December I used one of my [[Zeh Goldi]]s; for 27 January I took out a [[Dolly Vest Pocket|Certo Dolly]] and my [[Korelle 3x4]].
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The community of old-camera-owners on the web sometimes generates occasions for using them:
 +
*'''127 Days (12 July and 27 January)''' for cameras that use [[127 film]]. Summer 127 Day is also [[George Eastman]]'s birthday; I'm glad we mark that. We owe him a lot.
 +
*'''Take Your Box Camera to Work Day'''. I first spotted this at Flickr. It changes its name, and moves round the calendar a bit. The idea is great.
 +
*'''Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day''': look for pinholeday.org; usually falls in April.
  
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==Being an admin==
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I was promoted to be one of the admins for the wiki ([[Camera-wiki.org:About#Active admins|list of admins]]: there are something like six of us: I'm only near the top of that list for alphabetical-order reasons). If you need to ask something about CW, or complain about something, feel free to talk to me about it. If you're a registered wiki user, and logged in, then you can either write me a note here in the wiki (do it next door on [[User_talk:Dustin McAmera|my Talk page]]) or you can send a message using the 'Email this user' link at the bottom of the links on the left of the page. If you're not yet a registered wiki user you can still contact me at my Flickr account, linked above. In particular, we switched off the facility for people to register new user accounts for themselves, because we got large numbers of spammers; so if you want to register, you need to get an admin to do that for you.
  
==Vague to-do list==
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A wiki is a kind of collective. The articles were written by many people, and if your question is about the content of an article ('how old is this camera?'), it's quite likely that we admins may not know; but feel free to ask. As admins, we are here to enforce rules (rules of conduct, rules of style, rules about copyright), on the rare occasions that's necessary.
Thse are things I hope to do some work on soon-ish. Feel free to comment on these, especially if you think any of them is a really bad idea. (This isn't an invitation for anyone to insert jobs for me to do: I hate that! .. If you know enough to write one of these ideas up before I get to it, go ahead, of course.)
 
  
* '''Check Valdormar's flickr account to see if it stays dead''' (found dead Dec '11): if so, go through the pages that had his images, which are now commented out (but will show in an 'everything' search) and delete them properly. Some have already been replaced; could look for replacements for some more. (Still dead 30 Jan '12)
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==Camera-related websites I use==
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For all its faults, I don't know anything else as good as '''Flickr''' for hosting your pictures. It's where the wiki gets all its pictures. I have stayed there through several big changes. Nice little groups have formed (and disbanded). I'm still happy with what I get for what I pay. [https://www.flickr.com/photos/century_graphic/ This is the first page of my photos at Flickr]; all the photos I take for any reason, not just old-cameras stuff.
  
<!-- Never likely to do this:  
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Other camera-related sites I go to include these:
* Research model numbers for FEDs, in particular the NKVD model(s). Where are the numbers from; did Princelle coin them? If so, we should say so somewhere. I think I read somewhere that the NKVD cameras are FED 1c and 1d, differentiated only by the engraving on the top (and they have a round end on the superstructure below the shutter speed dial); so nothing a user would care about.  
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* [https://www.photrio.com/forum/ Photrio] is a big discussion forum. It has all the strengths and weaknesses that internet fora usually have. There are some opinionated fools with loud voices, and some cliques. There are also some people who know what they are talking about, and aren't too grand to help you. Photrio used to be APUG, which was very intolerant of digital-camera users. Photrio isn't quite like that, but those people are still there. It has For Sale and Wanted boards.
Also, I find now (from Jay Javier's site) the finish on the plated surface is supposed to be rougher than on later FED 1s.
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* [http://photo.net/classic-cameras-forum/ Photo.net] ''was'' a big forum site, and good for informed discussion of old cameras. It is still a good place to search for old posts about your own current difficulty, or see who else has posted about the camera you've just bought. I have cited photo.net forum posts as sources of details in the wiki, once or twice. It's much-reduced in the level of ''current'' activity though, and the quality of that activity is pretty poor too. The site is clunky and primitive compared to Flickr. The site was sold to CreativeLive, and then CreativeLive was sold to Fiverr, and it's moved to new forum software both times. The last move (October '22) was chaotic; the new owners didn't know they owned it - its a minor, dormant asset of the company they meant to buy. So it has little support from the owners, but they haven't switched off the lights. They restricted the built-in search to just the last ten years, which isn't helpful.  
Places to look:
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* I registered at the [http://www.largeformatphotography.info/forum/index.php Large Format Photography] forum. Until you register, the site is a bit awkward, and my registration hung up for several days (perhaps waiting to be signed off by a human admin). There are For Sale and Wanted boards, and fora for not-large format stuff too. I don't go there much, but it's good.
FEDKA webshop (has some Oscar Fricke info, and probably the camera to sell); Jay Javier; Nathan Dayton; McKeown; Alf Klomp?
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* There's a [http://www.5x4.co.uk/index.php UK Large Format Forum] too; not very active though.
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* The listings for [https://www.leitz-auction.com/auction/en/pastauctions past auctions at Westlicht] (now '''Leitz''' Photographica Auction) in Vienna: a good place to see good pictures of some cameras that you may never see anywhere else, even unique ones. I have often used these pictures to check details of cameras for articles in the wiki. You can't embed these pictures in the wiki, but I cite them as references. New auctions happen twice every year. I was tickled one time, to find a line of text from the wiki used in one of the auction's descriptions! Yeah - we made the big time! The auctions got smaller during the pandemic. They change the format of their URL every now and then, to keep me busy.
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* For wiki articles, I often search for patents at [https://worldwide.espacenet.com Espacenet], the European Patent Office's patent-search site.
  
* Expand the information for [[Lancaster]]:
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==New to-do list==
** The links on the page as it stands are ugly; I hate links with numbers like that. At least make the words clickable; but most of the models listed (and some that aren't) are at Early Photography.
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(there's also an ''old'' to-do list of ideas that will never get done, commented out here. It's not secret; you can read it in 'edit' mode; but don't expect me to ''do'' any of those ideas.)
** Should make clear the importance of the Instantograph name; this is many models, in many sizes. again, EP covers this rather well, and we should refer people there rather than just copy EP's information. Instantograph should be a page (at least one) in its own right. Maybe other models too. One of the pictures on the Lancaster page is some sort of Instantograph or BB Instantograph; passes some of EP's tests for a late model, despite what owner says on Flickr (stamp on the box, etc).
 
** Could give links to patents if there are any.
 
** Wood and Brass may have more examples.
 
** Westlicht examples.
 
  
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New ideas to do, sometime:
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*The Nikon RF page isn't bad, but it isn't as good as it should be, for quite important cameras. As a first step, try to find out what the defining features of each model are. I don't know, after skimming our page. Could add headings to make each model stand out; and there are no refs to good examples. Could add those.
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*Similarly, the 'Nikon RF lenses' page doesn't actually list any Nikon Nikon lenses. A start would be to trawl the auctions and add all the lenses sold there, with refs to good ones.
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*I saw a statement that Nikon made the same lenses in Contax mount; then I saw one in Leica mount. Worth noting that.
  
* I've been trawling through the November 2011 auction at http://www.Westlicht-Auction.com, and now mean to go back through earlier auctions. They have some ''really'' good pictures (more and better in the recent auctions than in the earlier ones) and some rare and unusual cameras, many of which we don't have yet. We can't include the pictures, but we can link to them. The listsings sometimes give useful information too (although I have found mistakes that even I spotted; film/plate sizes that were wrong, etc.)  '''This is a good place to say if you think we shouldn't be doing this style of article. They ''do'' often end up being just text and links, but if nobody objects, I'm going to keep on doing them!'''
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*Keep an eye on Leitz Auction. It would be good to investigate automating link updating. I have gone through correcting every Westlicht/Leitz auction link twice now: it would be good to have a tool that made that quicker if it ever happens again, but I'm not sure I can program that sort of thing.
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*Keep an eye on these pages, where I have linked items that are to be in the 44th Auction. Their URL may change once that auction happens, and maybe again when they sweep it into 'Past auctions':
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**[[Zenit 5]] - the bit about the Z 5K space camera.
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**[[Leitz Reisekamera]]
  
* I have added links to related patents to some articles, especially ones on early and innnovative cameras. Patents may be available as PDF at Google Patents or Espacenet. Here's stuff to do: find out how we stand on using the diagrams from Patents. Some of these would be excellent illustrations.
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*Keep half an eye on these, which were in the 43rd Auction. That's now in the list of Past Auctions; I am now adding a link to the auction. There's only a handful of items linked. But it's just possible the lot-level URL may change. Check them now and then for a while.
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**[[Bermpohl]]
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**[[Continette]]
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**[[Exakta lenses]]
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**[[Stöckig]]
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**[[Williamson]]
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**[[Fama II]]
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**[[Rollei SL3500]]
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**[[Quadrophot]]
  
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* Look up Ross HK7 and later models. Find out about Ross AB. Who was this? Why called Ross? What was Hasselblad doing there? Did this company end up as H~? HK presumably Hand Kamera? Is there enough about each camera to make a separate page,or just one for Ross?
  
<!-- It will be ages before I do anything more on this, if I ever do.
 
* Find out more about Agfacolor.
 
The name seems to have been used for more than one distinct type of film. One of these was very important indeed; it was a competitor to Kodachrome; and is interesting because it seems to have been one of the things done at the Wolfen plant. What happened to it?
 
* Also on Agfa, there is nothing about the current status of Agfa. I'm sure I have heard at least once that agfa was dead, but the products are still on the market. We should be able to say what's going on: is this really Mahn/Rollei, or Adox?
 
  
* Good source: [http://www.autochromes.culture.fr/index.php?id=126&L=1 Chronology of colour processes] at [http://www.autochromes.culture.fr/index.php?id=1&L=1 Autochromes Lumière], a project of the French Ministry of Culture.
 
  
From that page:
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<!--
* 1916 Agfacolor plate: similar to Autochrome, with a random colour-screen layer of dyed granules (of what?). This is quite a long time after Autochrome (pat in 1904, on the markey in 1907) and Dufay, Paget and Thames plates using regular colour screens were all on the market by 1912.
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==An old to-do list==
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(realistically, this list hasn't changed in at least a year: if you feel like relieving me of one of these guilty burdens, please do!)
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* Write the Century Graphic its own page (perhaps the Crown should also be separated from the Speed too: a focal plane shutter is quite a big deal, and the lens usage of the two is different too). The CG isn't a small Speed, it's more like a small Crown; and what the hell is a ''flexible wire viewfinder''?  ('''Ross: if you want to do this, go ahead. I know you have one of these too! :) ''')
  
* 1924 'Plaque Agfa, Germany': need more on that
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* Check all members of [[:Category:4x5]] and its subcats: 4x5 is  for 4x5 ''centimetre'' format (perhaps stupidly, since inch cameras are surely much more common); correct the cat to 4x5in where required.
  
* 1935 Kodachrome, USA and Agfacolor, Germany: ''Indirect colour photography by subtractive synthesis. Commercialisation of the first chromogentic colour films. The colours yellow, magenta and cyan are synthesised during development.''
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*While we're doing format categories, look up some of the stereo cameras; there are already cats for 6x13 and 47x105 I think. Check, and see if there should also be 9x18
That is, Agfa was not far behind Kodak with this idea. This is Agfacolor Neu, a positive film.
 
  
Usable picture: <nowiki>http://www.flickr.com/photos/nesster/5295939493/</nowiki> front page of a leaflet on the original colour-screen plates. Leaflet is from 1932; late in the life of the product.
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*Look at the Canon A-series SLRs: I think the AE1 page needs rewriting, and the AE1 Prog page actually says very little about the camera.
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* Search the wiki for any existing page referring to the origins of automatic exposure. There are already [[aperture priority]], [[shutter priority]] and [[exposure]]; of these, only aperture priority comes close to what I'm thinking of. Useful links include [http://worldwide.espacenet.com/publicationDetails/originalDocument?CC=GB&NR=190305608A&KC=A&FT=D&ND=3&date=19040204&DB=worldwide.espacenet.com&locale=en_EP British Patent 5608] of 1903 which describes an invention by a Max J Richter (not Max A Richter of Ernemann). It comprises a mechanical shutter, with electrical timing (the mechanical system is restrained by an electromagnet) and depending on the variable resistance of a selenium crystal to affect the time of exposure. Need to do a bit more searching to see if this patent was ever exploited, and look for other early designs. The first commercial one I know of is patented by [[Durst]] and used fairly soon after by [[Agfa]], using Durst's mechanism.
 +
Another relevant patent: [http://worldwide.espacenet.com/publicationDetails/originalDocument?CC=GB&NR=190504020A&KC=A&FT=D&ND=3&date=19051214&DB=worldwide.espacenet.com&locale=en_EP British Pat 4020] of 1905 describes a selenium-resistance circuit as part of a photometer (they don't mention photography as an application). Here, they note that the resistance of the selenium upon a change from dark to light starts fairly linear, then flattens out. They base the reading on the short-term change in resistance, to avoid the complication of a non-linear relationship, so they use the reaction of the selenium to operate a blind shading the cell after a short exposure. It's not much like Richter's design, but shows that more than one set of people thought the selenium cell was a workable idea at about this time. Search for selenium next.
 
-->
 
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Latest revision as of 23:38, 3 April 2024

About me

Hello!

I live in England. I resist the idea that I'm a collector, but I have more cameras than I can do justice to as a user (a few dozen). That said, the pleasure of using my cameras is sometimes just as important to me as the photographs. My oldest cameras are from the 1920s, but I like to try to write about earlier stuff.

My own cameras include several that I feel guilty for owning, because they're so good, and I use them so little: in no particular order, my Century Graphic; Mamiya 645 Pro ; Ensign Reflex; Agfa Standard 208 (9x12 cm); Calumet CC-401 4x5-inch monorail; and quarter-plate Speed Ensign.

An important one is a Canon EOS M50; life nowadays gets in the way of doing much with film, so got this, my first modern digital, to keep a toe-hold on some photography. It's not the same; but I have come to love it; particularly how it keeps going in the dark.

The community of old-camera-owners on the web sometimes generates occasions for using them:

  • 127 Days (12 July and 27 January) for cameras that use 127 film. Summer 127 Day is also George Eastman's birthday; I'm glad we mark that. We owe him a lot.
  • Take Your Box Camera to Work Day. I first spotted this at Flickr. It changes its name, and moves round the calendar a bit. The idea is great.
  • Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day: look for pinholeday.org; usually falls in April.

Being an admin

I was promoted to be one of the admins for the wiki (list of admins: there are something like six of us: I'm only near the top of that list for alphabetical-order reasons). If you need to ask something about CW, or complain about something, feel free to talk to me about it. If you're a registered wiki user, and logged in, then you can either write me a note here in the wiki (do it next door on my Talk page) or you can send a message using the 'Email this user' link at the bottom of the links on the left of the page. If you're not yet a registered wiki user you can still contact me at my Flickr account, linked above. In particular, we switched off the facility for people to register new user accounts for themselves, because we got large numbers of spammers; so if you want to register, you need to get an admin to do that for you.

A wiki is a kind of collective. The articles were written by many people, and if your question is about the content of an article ('how old is this camera?'), it's quite likely that we admins may not know; but feel free to ask. As admins, we are here to enforce rules (rules of conduct, rules of style, rules about copyright), on the rare occasions that's necessary.

Camera-related websites I use

For all its faults, I don't know anything else as good as Flickr for hosting your pictures. It's where the wiki gets all its pictures. I have stayed there through several big changes. Nice little groups have formed (and disbanded). I'm still happy with what I get for what I pay. This is the first page of my photos at Flickr; all the photos I take for any reason, not just old-cameras stuff.

Other camera-related sites I go to include these:

  • Photrio is a big discussion forum. It has all the strengths and weaknesses that internet fora usually have. There are some opinionated fools with loud voices, and some cliques. There are also some people who know what they are talking about, and aren't too grand to help you. Photrio used to be APUG, which was very intolerant of digital-camera users. Photrio isn't quite like that, but those people are still there. It has For Sale and Wanted boards.
  • Photo.net was a big forum site, and good for informed discussion of old cameras. It is still a good place to search for old posts about your own current difficulty, or see who else has posted about the camera you've just bought. I have cited photo.net forum posts as sources of details in the wiki, once or twice. It's much-reduced in the level of current activity though, and the quality of that activity is pretty poor too. The site is clunky and primitive compared to Flickr. The site was sold to CreativeLive, and then CreativeLive was sold to Fiverr, and it's moved to new forum software both times. The last move (October '22) was chaotic; the new owners didn't know they owned it - its a minor, dormant asset of the company they meant to buy. So it has little support from the owners, but they haven't switched off the lights. They restricted the built-in search to just the last ten years, which isn't helpful.
  • I registered at the Large Format Photography forum. Until you register, the site is a bit awkward, and my registration hung up for several days (perhaps waiting to be signed off by a human admin). There are For Sale and Wanted boards, and fora for not-large format stuff too. I don't go there much, but it's good.
  • There's a UK Large Format Forum too; not very active though.
  • The listings for past auctions at Westlicht (now Leitz Photographica Auction) in Vienna: a good place to see good pictures of some cameras that you may never see anywhere else, even unique ones. I have often used these pictures to check details of cameras for articles in the wiki. You can't embed these pictures in the wiki, but I cite them as references. New auctions happen twice every year. I was tickled one time, to find a line of text from the wiki used in one of the auction's descriptions! Yeah - we made the big time! The auctions got smaller during the pandemic. They change the format of their URL every now and then, to keep me busy.
  • For wiki articles, I often search for patents at Espacenet, the European Patent Office's patent-search site.

New to-do list

(there's also an old to-do list of ideas that will never get done, commented out here. It's not secret; you can read it in 'edit' mode; but don't expect me to do any of those ideas.)

New ideas to do, sometime:

  • The Nikon RF page isn't bad, but it isn't as good as it should be, for quite important cameras. As a first step, try to find out what the defining features of each model are. I don't know, after skimming our page. Could add headings to make each model stand out; and there are no refs to good examples. Could add those.
  • Similarly, the 'Nikon RF lenses' page doesn't actually list any Nikon Nikon lenses. A start would be to trawl the auctions and add all the lenses sold there, with refs to good ones.
  • I saw a statement that Nikon made the same lenses in Contax mount; then I saw one in Leica mount. Worth noting that.
  • Keep an eye on Leitz Auction. It would be good to investigate automating link updating. I have gone through correcting every Westlicht/Leitz auction link twice now: it would be good to have a tool that made that quicker if it ever happens again, but I'm not sure I can program that sort of thing.
  • Keep an eye on these pages, where I have linked items that are to be in the 44th Auction. Their URL may change once that auction happens, and maybe again when they sweep it into 'Past auctions':
  • Look up Ross HK7 and later models. Find out about Ross AB. Who was this? Why called Ross? What was Hasselblad doing there? Did this company end up as H~? HK presumably Hand Kamera? Is there enough about each camera to make a separate page,or just one for Ross?