5 Frames with a Pentax Spotmatic and Kominar 28mm/3.5 – By Toni Skokovic

By Toni Skokovic

Sometimes we get pockets of time, and these create adventures, discoveries. On a recent trip to North Carolina, decided to take a detour to a local camera store and see what they had in their “garbage” bins – boxes of as-is film photo gear. I always wanted to do a $100 exercise, walk in and get a full kit and some film for $100 or less, and this was the opportunity.

Clouds I, Raleigh, NC – Ilford FP4

For $55US, I found Pentax Spotmatic with 28mm Kominar lens. It was the focal length of the lens that attracted me to this camera. The weather outside was hot and humid pre-storm weather, so I grabbed two rolls of FP4 and decided to spend about 45 minutes in downtown Raleigh shooting a test roll.

Clouds II, Raleigh, NC, Ilford FP4

Following the lunch at the local pub, I set out into the heat to take photos. Out of the bargain bin, the camera worked. Film was loaded easily, and film advance works quite smoothly. The shooting experience itself was the great.

Crosswalk, Raleigh, NC, Ilford FP4

Spotmatic is a relatively large SLR body, definitely heftier than OM-1 or Nikon FE. It feels more substantial to handle, but by no means awkward. Controls and dials are pure efficiency – very easy and intuitive to operate. Viewfinder is rather spartan, but over the years of shooting film, I have grown accustomed to appreciate this.  Spotmatics do have lightmeter built in, but it was malfunctioning in this particular camera. This, however, did not interfere with the shooting experience.

At the corner, Raleigh, NC, Ilford FP4

Fully mechanical operation is what I like the most about this camera. It fits well in hand and does not get in the way of photography, unlike so many electronic and digital models. With a distinct design, this camera certainly stands out, but what makes it even more attractive is pure raw efficiency it offers to a photographer. Combined with a right film, this is a great utility camera .

Provisions, Raleigh, NC, Ilford FP4

The results were great, at least I am happy with them. A purely indulgent purchase, camera I did not need or think of before. Still, one that is quite a lot of fun to use.

Share this post:

Find more similar content on 35mmc

Use the tags below to search for more posts on related topics:

Contribute to 35mmc for an ad-free experience.

There are two ways to contribute to 35mmc and experience it without the adverts:

Paid Subscription – £2.99 per month and you’ll never see an advert again! (Free 3-day trial).

Subscribe here.

Content contributor – become a part of the world’s biggest film and alternative photography community blog. All our Contributors have an ad-free experience for life.

Sign up here.

About The Author

Comments

JR Smith on 5 Frames with a Pentax Spotmatic and Kominar 28mm/3.5 – By Toni Skokovic

Comment posted: 13/01/2018

Invest in an expensive CLA to get the meter working and you'll really love the Spotmatic.
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

JR Smith replied:

Comment posted: 13/01/2018

I meant inexpensive. :-)

Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ScottP replied:

Comment posted: 13/01/2018

If you're in the US, Google Eric Hendrickson at Pentaxs.com. Reliable, honest, highly skilled and inexpensive. And no, he's not my brother-in-law; I'm just a satisfied customer.

Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Toni replied:

Comment posted: 13/01/2018

Hello - yes - done and love it!

Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

John on 5 Frames with a Pentax Spotmatic and Kominar 28mm/3.5 – By Toni Skokovic

Comment posted: 15/01/2018

Interesting article, thanks for writing it, along with attaching some sample images. I always enjoy reading information about different cameras along with seeing some pictures to indicate the potential quality of the camera system and lenses.

Don't know if the meter on this camera was off, but it seems all your images are under exposed. And not very sharp. Consider using an off camera light meter (as someone suggested), or use the Sunny 16 rule when exposing your shots.

Also, after scanning these images, did you adjust the contrast using the curves adj in Photoshop? And slightly sharpen? I do that to all my scans regardless, and you'll find thedarkroom.com does similar tweaking, if you've ever sent film to be developed and scanned by them. It makes a difference. I know some people are purists and don't do anything after scanning, but I personally don't enjoy seeing hair or dirt or some other object in my picture after post processing.

Just my two cents, I'm not an expert by a far, still learning like everyone else. Please take it as that. Keep shooting film, it is an enjoyable hobby that never ends, too many cameras to experiment with and not enough hours in the day.
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Toni replied:

Comment posted: 15/01/2018

Hello John - thanks. Yes - this was the first roll, and was a bit of trial run for the lens and the camera. I usually tweak the contrast in Lightroom and remove an odd imperfection. Better images followed out of this (isn't photography always an ongoing adventure), but these imperfect ones are special...

Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Chris Pattison on 5 Frames with a Pentax Spotmatic and Kominar 28mm/3.5 – By Toni Skokovic

Comment posted: 15/01/2018

Congratulation on the purchase of your Spotmatic. I have an SV, which has no built in light meter or split prism finder. I love its simplicity and beautiful design; a pleasure to use these Asahi Pentaxes!
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Peter Boorman on 5 Frames with a Pentax Spotmatic and Kominar 28mm/3.5 – By Toni Skokovic

Comment posted: 01/03/2018

Another 'Happy Memories' camera for me. The first 'proper' camera I was given as a child was a Zenith E, so when I wanted to buy a better body the M42 lens mount persuaded me to go for a Spotmatic. I ended up with three of them which traveled a lot and worked very hard for me: straighforward, intuitive, silky smooth, very reliable and they just FELT good. (Three: one for colour slide, one for BW, and one to keep free in case I suddenly wanted a roll of something else...) The Spotmatics in turn got me into Pentax (ie. Takumar) glass and I found I loved the look.

Years later I moved on to a Pentax MX, then several LX bodies, then some AF (MZ-3 and the wonderful MZ-s, though the LX remained my favourite) and eventually digital Pentaxes. It was the look the glass gave me and the unfussy handling, plus a tendency to design things a bit smaller than Nikon, that kept me going back to Pentax - and it all started with the Spotmatic.
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Toni replied:

Comment posted: 01/03/2018

Very cool story - this camera is a tank. Struggles a bit when it's cold, but otherwise is a solid workhorse.

Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Khürt Louis Williams on 5 Frames with a Pentax Spotmatic and Kominar 28mm/3.5 – By Toni Skokovic

Comment posted: 27/03/2019

I'm stunned by the number of vintage lenses and cameras you find in bins. And cheaply. I've looked on eBay. A vintage pentax or helios will be $209.
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Steve Snell on 5 Frames with a Pentax Spotmatic and Kominar 28mm/3.5 – By Toni Skokovic

Comment posted: 24/11/2019

Loved the photography, particularly the cloud images. I purchased the Spotmatic F this spring and had a CLA done by Camera Solutions in Portland OR. Its produced some of my favorite film images. I appreciate that this was a $100.00 low budget experiment and think you were very successful overall.

Thanks!
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *