Picking up classic cameras for relatively little money can be rewarding, but you know what's better? Getting them for free :mrgreen:. I was just looking around the loft for my parents' old slides so I could scan them, and at the bottom of a box I discovered a brown leather case that immediately told me "old German camera" :mrgreen:. An odd one this, the film advance is done by twisting a kind of collar on the lens. The camera's definitely seen better days, but the lens is completely clean and... "Carl Zeiss Jena - Tessar 2.8/50"... I have Zeiss glass 
Edit: Looks like I spoke too soon. I have Zeiss glass, but I don't have a working camera behind it. The first collection of shutter blades on the lens work fine, but the camera shutter blades behind them (the um, Yin Yang ones, my brain's gone dead so I can't think of the proper term) won't open. AFAIK light being able to get to the film is a rather important part of the whole photographic process, so it looks like this is a non-worker. Somehow I feel even more annoyed than I would if I'd paid for the camera, since finding it like that built up my expectations
ah such is life... I shall have to end it! Or possibly not. At least it'll be cool to have a Zeiss paperweight 

Edit: Looks like I spoke too soon. I have Zeiss glass, but I don't have a working camera behind it. The first collection of shutter blades on the lens work fine, but the camera shutter blades behind them (the um, Yin Yang ones, my brain's gone dead so I can't think of the proper term) won't open. AFAIK light being able to get to the film is a rather important part of the whole photographic process, so it looks like this is a non-worker. Somehow I feel even more annoyed than I would if I'd paid for the camera, since finding it like that built up my expectations

