Camera Magazine Issue #05 English and German Language
2Category:
Camera #05
Fifth issue of the camera photography magazine - stay analog . Bilingual German/English. 21 x 28 cm, printed entirely in four colors, perfect binding, high quality paper. Here are the topics of issue #05:
Exclusive: The Mysterious Mju
The small analog photography store in Amsterdam launches a new electronic analog camera similar to Olympus' mju series. Really cool. But the camera is already on pre-sale, before there is even a prototype or a first tested series. Can it do well?
Exclusive: the decline of analog?
Ferrania at the end, quality shortcomings of the Rollei 35 AF, sharp decline in sales of the Pentax 17 in Europe, steadily rising prices at Kodak. How long will all be well?
New contest: STRUCTURES - Enter the black and white photo contest.
This time we are giving away 30 black and white films of the new Wolfen NP100. This will allow you to participate in our STRUCTURES contest.
Exclusive: Testing the NANA Camera
How is the newcomer from Hong Kong, the golden Nana? Read our review.
Hasselblad's history.
The brand's roots go back to 1841. The new camera encapsulates the entire success story of the legendary Swedish photography brand..
History of Silbersalz
the camera caught up with filmmakers in 35 mm cartridges. A look at their new lab in Berlin and an interview with Silbersalz director Thomas Bergmann about his plans.
Ulrich Ackermann: the vertical photographer
The panoramic portraits taken by aerial photographer Ulrich Ackermann in Switzerland have already been featured in numerous exhibitions and books. Here you can see his unique images of the snow-capped Dolomites, taken with the Hasselblad X-Pan panoramic camera.
Philip Reekers: the beauty that otherwise goes unnoticed
Our cover and a great magazine photo feature, along with an interview, are worth Philip Reekers' stunning color photos, taken primarily in medium format..
Kodak Gold / Color Plus: which is the best?
We asked users of two Facebook photography groups: how do the two films differ? And in the magazine we have a riddle for our readers: which photos did we take on the Lüneburg Heath with the Color Plus and which with the Kodak Gold?
New objectivity: camera presents classics from 1914 to 1981
The legendary photographs of August Sander (1876-1964) and Albert Renger-Patzsch (1897-1966), the main representatives of the “New Objectivity” in photography, meet the icons of Robert Häusser (1924-2013), a postwar classic.
Recently seen products
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