nikon fm2n

Main Street Portraits, 2011 by Nathan Jones

Nikon FM2N, Nikkor 50 mm f/1.4 AI, Fuji Pro 400H.

What beautiful skin tones! I wish that I had shot more Pro 400H while it was available. I have only a single roll left in my refrigerator. It expired more than a decade ago. I had been reserving it for a special project, but I think I should just go ahead and expose it before it becomes unusable.

My friend RJR and I met the young woman featured in this pair of photographs on Main Street in Vancouver while we were out shooting one Saturday morning—our regular weekend activity for about two years in 2010-2012. She is holding my Rolleiflex Automat Model 3, built in 1949, which I purchased in rough condition from a used camera shop in Valparaiso, Chile, in 2009.

I keep taking the same photograph, over and over again by Nathan Jones

Anaheim and Vancouver, August and December 2010. Both photographs made with my favourite camera, the Nikon FM2N.

Mechanical. Rugged. Reliable. My review of the Nikon FM2 now Published by Nathan Jones

The Nikon FM2 enjoyed a production run of almost two decades—and for most of that time, it was an anachronism, even by Nikon’s own standards. When the FM2 was released in 1982, the electronically controlled FE, which included aperture-priority auto-exposure—a feature conspicuous for its absence in the FM2—had already been in production for 4 years; only a year later, Nikon unveiled the “technocamera” or FA, which premiered what came to be known as matrix metering and also incorporated shutter-priority auto-exposure for the first time in a Nikon body; and, at the same time, the company added autofocusing to its flagship camera, in the F3AF model. Until the time the FM2 was finally discontinued in 2001, Nikon continued to iterate its professional line of cameras, including introducing the F4 (1988) and the F5 (1996), while only giving the FM2 a modest upgrade (in 1984, to the FM2N, which featured a new, titanium-bladed shutter and an increased X-sync speed from 1/125 s to 1/250 s). Nikon’s high-end line also underwent an evolution during this period, including introduction of the F90 (1992), F90x (1996), and F100 (1999) series of semi-professional cameras, while the FE was upgraded to the comparatively short-lived FE2 (1983-1987). In its consumer offerings, Nikon experimented across a wide range of cameras with plastic components, new form factors, and electronically-controlled, automatic shooting modes tailored to beginning photographers. And all the while, the venerable, rugged, reliable FM2 looked on, essentially unchanged, inheriting none of these improvements. The frothy competition between the major Japanese brands in the 1980s and 90s gave rise to many innovations, some useful and others faddish. This “progress” in camera technology left the FM2 behind—and yet, the camera only appreciated in value and found its way into the bottom of many a professional’s camera bag as a trusty back-up. The FM2 was a loyal friend that could be relied upon to keep shooting when batteries died and temperatures reached –40 ℃.

Continue reading …

In and Around Hedley, BC by Nathan Jones