Nikon F2 – A few from the first roll

By Gary Smith

I recently added a Nikon F2 to the stable and loaded it up with Kodak Portra 400. The following shots were taken over several days in several locations with two lenses: the pre-AI 105/2.5 and the 35/2.

These first two were from a birding trip I made to the Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge near Ridgefield, Washington (USA). My primary camera while birding is the OM Systems OM-1 fitted with a 2x TC and the M.Zuiko 300/4 Pro lens. This rig gives me pretty good reach and so far, I’ve been much happier with this set-up for birding. On this occasion I tossed the new-to-me F2 into the car and took some shots at the refuge.

F2 with 105/2.5

I loved the way the red algae contrasted with the water. Although there are a few ducks in this shot, they obviously were not the subject. In this next shot I happened to be too close to get a full body shot of the bird with the OM-1. I was focusing on the neck, but it looks like I must have missed focus?

Egret with F2 and 105/2.5

A few days later I took the F2 into downtown Portland on a trip to Powell’s City of Books. Since I had 400 ISO film I thought I’d see how it did in the stacks.

In the stacks

I have no complaints so far. The F2 handles much like the FE that I wrote about a year ago here. Initially I was having some trouble adjusting to the meter within the view finder and eventually settled on using the meter indicator on top of the DP-1 view finder. Because the F2 is completely mechanical, the shutter speed is continuously variable. With a set aperture you can adjust the shutter speed to exactly center on what the camera believes to be the perfect exposure for that aperture so for example you don’t have to worry if 125 is too slow while 250 is too fast because the F2 allows you to set your shutter between what would typically be the normally set speeds.

More shots were taken with the 105/2.5 although nothing to compete with the Afghan Girl.

I then switched to my 35/2 that (based on the s/n) was likely built between 1977 – 1981. The thing with old Nikkor lenses is there are often several variations of the build over the years. I have been relying on info from both The Thousand and One Nights (Nikon site) and a site in New Zeeland that my browser thinks is un-secure. The camera then went to the coast (I also took the Rollei 3.5B loaded with Lomo Turquoise more on that later).

Short Sand Beach

This is a secluded spot that neither my wife (lived her whole life in Oregon) nor I had ever visited. It is a short hike through the woods to the cove. As you can see there is quite a bit of washed-up driftwood from recent storms. The above view is looking southwest while this next view is looking northwest.

Looking northwest

We usually also stop in Cannon Beach. We were a few days too early to catch Puffins at Haystack Rock but there are always plenty of gulls.

Posing gull

I’m not sure that I squeezed everything possible out of this first roll through the F2. The camera is a real brick weighing in at 1.6 pounds with the DP-1 finder and no lens. That said, it is comfortable to handle and felt similar to the FE and my Canon FTb. All of the shots above are as scanned however I did resize them to avoid bloating Hamish’s server. The Portra 400 is a little too grainy for my taste in color and I might have done better with more sun.

I was quite happy to pick up the F2 for $200 USD on eBay and happy that the meter, shutter and aperture all seem to be working as per spec.

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About The Author

By Gary Smith
Gary has been shooting photographs for 50+ years using a variety of film and digital cameras. For a time, he was employed in the software industry as an interface designer. He has once again been shooting film on a variety of cameras he was never able to own 50 years ago and has begun developing and scanning both black and white and color films during the past 14 months. He lives in the state of Oregon in the Pacific Northwest area of the USA.
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Comments

Andrew on Nikon F2 – A few from the first roll

Comment posted: 22/05/2026

Hi Gary,
Lovely pictures! I would like to ask a general question of you and all the other frequent contributors to this site. Many of the articles are inspiring stories something along the lines of “this is a camera I picked up from x, here is the first roll I put through it…..”
Such stories inspired me to get my old Nikon F501 out and put a roll through it. But what a disappointment- the light seals had gone. I know that a few Nikon cameras had cotton rope seals (and I think the F2 may be one) and these will last for ever. But surely every one else with a camera from the 70s-90s with foam seals is finding they are end of life?
Was I just unlucky, or are all you other contributors fitting new seals first before you put a roll through?
As for me, I will first have to replace the seals, or have them replaced, before I can take another film photo….. :-(
Thanks for comments!
Reply

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