I have order a neckstrap from Gordy Coale to my Mamyia and it looks perfect. I also use a Mamiya Super Deluxe along with my Yashica Lynx 14 (my old good rangefinders). Salt and Pepper chicken wings sounds good - the best ones of those I had was somewhere on Jackson street in Chinatown (they also have really good salt and pepper pork chops (dry)). I'm going to have to try the dishes there (I also always have my chow mein/fun Hong Kong style). Michael, thanks for the sugggestions and comment. In fact, there were 8 interchangeable lenses created: 2 wide angle lenses (55mm and 65mm), 3 normal lenses (80mm f2.8 and f3.5, and 105mm), and 3 zoom lenses (135mm, 180mm, and 250mm).
They are my absolute two favorite dishes in chinatown! Beautiful work by the way. The Mamiya C series is also one of the very few TLR medium format cameras that offer full interchangeable lenses. Just thought I should suggest that you try the house chow mein - hong kong style! - and the salt-and-pepper chicken wings at the A1 Cafe featured in your beautiful photo if you never have. It was my very first camera and I owe my knowledge & love of photography because of it. I don't use it as much but maybe just maybe you've inspired me to break it out of storage. I have a Mamiya ZE-2 slr that I still own to this day. Below is one of the frames that escaped my back-opening-light. After ruining a couple of frames from opening up the back I fired off the remaining frames and had the roll developed at my favorite, local lab. It is engraved 'Super 16' and can be distinguished from the Mark II by only having three of the f-stops labelled f3.5, f5.6 and f11. The Mamiya Super 16 (I) was produced for six years. The other week I was going through my cameras to check which ones had film in them (I have a habit of shooting half a roll in a camera and then forgetting it's there) - and found that the Mamiya was loaded with a roll of Tri-X 400 with more than half of it exposed. The Mamiya flash has a bracket that locks the camera in place with the cable plug screwing the camera to the bracket. I don't know why not as I find it to be an attractive camera, good ergonomics (for me) and it sports a pretty impressive 48/1.7 lens. The built-in Aperture Priority A/E feature in the Mamiya 7 II allows you to shoot. With a panoramic adapter accessory, this Mamiya camera allows you to take a series of stunning pictures in a panoramic format. For some reason I never ended up using the Mamiya much. Compact and lightweight, the Mamiya 7 II is a rangefinder camera with leaf shutter lenses that are interchangeable. I think I was initially attracted to it due to the similarities between it and the Olympus 35LC (which is another camera I own and like). The camera was in near-perfect condition and the meter is still spot-on which is impressive for a camera made 40+ years ago (1964). A few years ago (April, 2004 to be more precise) I picked up a Mamiya Super Deluxe at a Photo fair for sixty dollars.