

The first one, yes. That's a very old bellows camera, fully mechanical, lens isn't coated, the max aperture is f/4.5 on an 85mm lens and there are only four shutter speedsThose photos have a really good look about that, is that due to the age of the camera?
The Olympus Trip 35, mixed with some cheap Poundland Kodacolor film is probably a good route to go down - the Trip does everything for you, only two shutter speeds and all automatic and batteryless, I think it looks quite nice and it's reasonably compact.
I wouldn't touch the Canon A series second hand. I've owned a couple and I can't say I think much of them. They aren't very well designed and suffer from irritating and sometimes terminal mechanical problems like mirror cough. If you decide on Canon go for an earlier fully mechanical model like an FTb, they're far more reliable and just generally nicer cameras to use (and they look better).
TBF the cough is only terminal if you do nothing about it for a long time and it's a simple remedy for someone who knows what they're doing (the application of some lubricant).
Any camera of a similar vintage will likely need new light seals and I wouldn't dismiss all 1970s Olympus bodies as unreliable on that basis.
the AF35M II is nice to use, load the film, point and shoot, nice lens, fully auto and auto focus, and nice and cheap 
Good luck with finding one cheap Brian - but I tell you what - if you find a good clean working QL1.7 anywhere above your definition of cheap but less than £40 (or £60 if its an all-black version) get it and I'll take it off your hands,pay postage, and drop a fiver in the charity of your choice![]()
but I'd go to £3 for a QL17 (to play with)....but there is no logic to some sellers as everything from skate boards to camera gear (well not Leicas etc) is junk to them, and it's getting to these sellers before someone else.freecom2 said:I thought it was a relatively compact camera, but it just isn't.
Though TBF, relative to many rangefinders like Yashica GT it is quite compact.
Personally, I don't get the need for tiny cameras - ok, light cameras I can see - I don't want to carry 5lb of pig iron up a mountain (sorry Fed3) when I can carry something lighter, but, for my own kind of shooting, all making things small does is make them fiddly to use and more prone to my clumsy fingers breaking things. Something like my A-1 is small enough for me, though as I've said ^^^ if Brian can turn up a nice cheap functioning QL17 in black I'll happily go for one. I can see if you're shooting in a covert manner (street or whatever) then something you can snap and drop into a pocket is a good idea, but as I always seem to have my camera on the top of a set of sticks, shooting landscapes, and faffing around for half a hour per frame, covert cameras aren't a priority to me.