10966332 Posted June 9, 2018 Share Posted June 9, 2018 Hello ! Im recently found love in 35 mm photography, its started as one semester of classic photography on my art university. I realy love experimentig with double exposures. That dreamy looking film is magical for me. Now im using Smena 8 for these experiments (yeah,poor student life ). But i want to upgrade on small rangefinder camera. I found on this forum discusion about double exposures and somebody metioned Ricoh 500 me. And i fall in love ! But i cant find that camera in my country. Do you know any cameras with the same "button" for double exposure ? Thanks for reading ! Have great day ! Smena 8/Fuji film iso 200 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike Gammill Posted June 9, 2018 Share Posted June 9, 2018 If precise registration of multiple exposures is not essential you can do it with many cameras by holding in the rewind release button while advancing the film. Or if alignment is important an older camera that has a separate lever for cocking the shutter from film winding would also work. The only cameras that I can think of that have provisions for multiple exposures are SLRs. A few examples: Konica Auto Reflex T3, Minolta XE-7 (XE in Japan or XE-1 in Europe). Minolta SRT 202, most likely most of the Nikon F series, and many others. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sandy Vongries Posted June 9, 2018 Share Posted June 9, 2018 The other thing you can do is superimpose multiple negatives in the enlarger. With practice you can create some remarkable images. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike Gammill Posted June 9, 2018 Share Posted June 9, 2018 Sandy's suggestion can also work well. I've done that a few times when I wanted to combine images taken at different times. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
10966332 Posted June 9, 2018 Author Share Posted June 9, 2018 If precise registration of multiple exposures is not essential you can do it with many cameras by holding in the rewind release button while advancing the film. Or if alignment is important an older camera that has a separate lever for cocking the shutter from film winding would also work. The only cameras that I can think of that have provisions for multiple exposures are SLRs. A few examples: Konica Auto Reflex T3, Minolta XE-7 (XE in Japan or XE-1 in Europe). Minolta SRT 202, most likely most of the Nikon F series, and many others. Thanks for reply ! SLR cameras are kinda new to me. (i'm bad clumsy beginner). I'm going to finding them on my local online bazaars! Great tip :-). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
10966332 Posted June 9, 2018 Author Share Posted June 9, 2018 The other thing you can do is superimpose multiple negatives in the enlarger. With practice you can create some remarkable images. Wow cool tip ! We have enlarger on uni. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mwmcbroom Posted June 10, 2018 Share Posted June 10, 2018 I have a couple of Canon rangefinders that are capable of double exposure. These are the early, Leica-looking rangefinders. Mine are both Canon IIIa's. There's a small lever next to the shutter release and film wind knob that, when flipped, does something that helps achieve double exposure. I don't know precisely how it works. I would definitely read up on this first before trying it, though. Mike Butkus (the net's best source for camera manuals in .pdf form) may have some old Canon rangefinder owner's manuals. I also have a Canon P, a more modern rangefinder model, which is much more simple and streamlined in operation. I suspect that, with this camera, you merely have to press the button on the bottom to disengage film advance, same as is done with many modern film SLR cameras. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JDMvW Posted June 10, 2018 Share Posted June 10, 2018 The classic Argus C-3 can do multiple exposures - just cock only the shutter each time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moving On Posted June 10, 2018 Share Posted June 10, 2018 (edited) An excellent application is to take an exposure placing a properly exposed moon in a dark clear area of a second exposure of landscape. Photography techniques: Making landscape-moon double exposures Shoot the Moon Scroll down the second link for D.E. Specifics.... Edited June 10, 2018 by Moving On Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike Gammill Posted June 10, 2018 Share Posted June 10, 2018 A technique I've used in the past to include the moon is to shoot a whole roll of moon photos at various focal lengths with bracketed exposure and then run the roll through the camera again with the landscape or other subject. Another method I've used is to process the roll of moon photos and then sandwich in darkroom with desired landscape. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SCL Posted June 10, 2018 Share Posted June 10, 2018 As others suggested, many rangefinder cameras can double expose by engaging their rewind button or lever, just as the Ricoh 500 does. And the probable reason you can't find it in your country is simply they weren't made after the 1960s, so the most logical place to find them, as well as other rangefinder cameras is on an auction site like Ebay with wide international exposure (pardon the pun). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
john_shriver Posted June 12, 2018 Share Posted June 12, 2018 Topcon 35-S, 35-L, and 35-JL can all double-expose by cocking the shutter by hand. But not very common, and typically not cheap. Probably cheapest multiple exposure camera is Pentax ZX-7 (a/k/a MZ-7). But you have to decide before first exposure that it will be a double. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
robertmarvin Posted June 16, 2018 Share Posted June 16, 2018 You can re-cock the shutter for double exposures on screw-mount Leicas [and similar Canons and, probably most Leica copies] by depressing the shutter release, turning the high speed dial counter-clockwise, and taking your finger off the shutter release. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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