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The Leica minilux is the first in a series of four luxury titanium-clad point and shoot cameras that were produced by Leica Camera starting from 1995; it is equipped with a high-quality lens and body to compete with similar premium compact cameras produced during the Japanese bubble-economy era, including the Contax T line, Konica Hexar, Nikon 28Ti/35Ti, Minolta TC-1, Ricoh GR series, and ...
Leica Mini Zoom (1993–1997): Zoom lenses Vario Elmar 35–70 with luminous intensity 1:4-7,6. The design of the camera was created by Manfred Meinzer with Klaus-Dieter Schaefer. The Mini Zoom was manufactured by Kyocera for Leica Camera. [37] Leica Mini III (1996–1997) [36] Minilux series. Leica Minilux 40 mm (1995–2003) [36]
Cameras that use 135 film (better known as 35mm film). Subcategories ... Leica minilux; Leica R-E; Leica R3; Leica R4; Leica R4s; Leica R5;
The Leica was the first practical 35 mm camera that used standard cinema 35 mm film. The Leica transports the film horizontally, extending the frame size to 24×36mm with a 2:3 aspect ratio , instead of the 18×24 mm of cinema cameras, which transport the film vertically.
This is a list of Leica cameras. Leica Camera AG is a German optics company which produces Leica cameras . The predecessor of the company, formerly known as Ernst Leitz GmbH, is now three companies: Leica Camera AG, Leica Geosystems AG, and Leica Microsystems AG, producing cameras, geosurvey equipment, and microscopes, respectively.
Leica 35 mm f /2.8 Elmarit-R 1st version – 1964; Leica 35 mm f /2.8 Elmarit-R 2nd version; Leica 35 mm f /2.8 Elmarit-R 3rd version; Leica 35 mm f /2.8 Elmarit-R 4th version (Built-in lens hood; 55mm filter) Leica 35 mm f /2.0 Summicron-R 1st version – 1970; Leica 35 mm f /2.0 Summicron-R 2nd version – 1976; Leica 35 mm f /1.4 Summilux-R
There is no precise definition of the term, but lenses marketed as "standard zoom" usually cover a range of at least 30mm to 70mm in terms of 35mm equivalent focal length with an optical zoom ratio of 2.5× (e.g. 28-70mm) to 5× (e.g. 24-120mm) — the most common being 3× (e.g. 24-70mm). [1]
The Rollei QZ 35W and 35T are luxury titanium-clad point and shoot cameras that were produced by Rollei starting from 1997; they are equipped with a high-quality Rollei VarioApogon lens and body to compete with similar premium compact cameras produced during the Japanese bubble-economy era, including the Contax T line, Konica Hexar, Leica minilux, Nikon 28Ti/35Ti, Minolta TC-1, and Ricoh GR ...