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The Sigma 35 mm f / 1.4 DG HSM Art is a wide-angle prime lens made by the Sigma Corporation. [1] The lens was announced at the 2012 photokina trade fair. [2]The lens is produced in Canon EF mount, Nikon F-mount, Pentax K mount, Sigma's own SA mount, and the Sony/Minolta AF Mount varieties, all have the same optical formula.
The X-Pro2 is the first mirrorless interchangeable-lens camera to have dual SD card slots. Fujifilm made some changes to the layout from the X-Pro1 and added a joystick. The X-Pro2 jointly won a Camera Grand Prix Japan 2016 Editors Award. [7] The successor to the X-Pro2 is the Fujifilm X-Pro3 announced in October 2019.
In 2007, ticket sales amounted to over 1.25 million euros, and 3.5 million euros were collected from the rental of exhibitors' stands. [4] The average cost of renting a stand at SIAB 2007 was between 50 and 90 euros per square meter, while the cost of building the stand was 445 euros per square meter.
Tower 41 (Mamiya Automatic 35 EEF) Mamiya Mammy (1953) — zone focus system Mamiya Speed Shot Special (a.k.a. Mamiya Pistol Camera) (c. 1954) — half-frame; rare police model; not sold to public
[3] [4] [5] Ford said it would invest €675 million (US$923 million) in the former Daewoo car factory and that it would buy supplies from the Romanian market worth €1 billion (US$1.39 billion). [6] In September 2009, the company began to assemble the Ford Transit Connect in Craiova, and in 2012, production of the new Ford B-Max was started. [7]
ARO (short for Auto Romania) was a Romanian off-road vehicle manufacturer located in Câmpulung. The first ARO vehicles were produced in 1957, and the last in 2003. For a short while, Daihatsu-powered AROs were sold in Spain and produced in Portugal under the "Portaro" brand. In Italy, AROs were produced and sold under the ACM brand, often ...
Ziss-Modell, originally also called R. W. Modell or Wittek Modell were 'brand' names of the German Mini-Auto firm which made diecast metal classic and contemporary vehicles from the 1960s through the late 1970s. Later, use of the Mini-Auto name largely disappeared and the models were mainly known as Ziss or R. W. Modell.
The lens was of 38 mm focal length and with a maximum aperture of f /2.8. A ring around the lens optic itself was used to set the film speed (ISO 25 to 400), which was indicated on a small window on the front of the lens assembly; also there, but below the lens optic itself, was the cadmium sulfide (CdS) photoresistor for the light meter .