
The site seems to have gone live some time around the 1st of April.....![]()



I'd love a digital back for my dynax 7. Or someone should invent a digital film canister of some description that would just pop into a conventional 35mm camera and fool it into thinking there's film in there. Would be quite cool if you could set it to 36 exposures, fixed iso and then pop it out and plug it into a usb socket![]()
Be even cooler if, after you take it out of the camera, you can dunk it in some magical fluids by a special process and the pictures magically appear! You could maybe either fix the ISO when you buy it in the shop, or perform a bit of voodoo as you put it in the camera!.![]()
THANK YOU FOR
YOUR INTEREST IN RE-35.
SOME GOOD NEWS:
The feedback to Re-35 has truly been overwhelming. It seems Re-35 really addresses a need and people worldwide can’t seem to wait to get their hands on our "product".
THE BAD NEWS:
Some things are too good to be true!
Re-35 does not really exist. We (the design company Rogge & Pott) created Re-35 as an exercise in identity-design. We invented the "product" because it was something, that we had wished for for a long time (as many others).
We launched the website and sent out "press releases" on April first - thinking, that the date would make clear, that Re35 is just wishful thinking - a classic April Fools Prank!
A lot of people didn’t hear about Re-35 until after April first, so we added this disclaimer
HOWEVER:
All this attention Re35 ist getting might actually be good for something. It proves, that there is a gigantic community of photographers with analog equipment out there that is desperately waiting for a product like this to come along- and we are looking into the possibilities.
We hope there are no hard feelings
and that you are not too disappointed.
And thanks for all the positve feedback!
Cheers from Germany.
Henning Rogge
joxby said:Joking aside.....you're all mad
I thought the whole point of shooting a film camera was because it shoots....err......film, who the hell wants digital pictures from a film camera ???
Don't we make enough synthetic blandness to sink the Queen Mary as it is without arseing up the output of our beloved film cameras too...![]()
I wish that people made a Film SLR, with that same feeling, the shutter speed dials, cocking the shutter, and all that jazz, just with a sensor in the back. No screen no nothing, just a card slot and a battery shooting film style just digital outcomes![]()
Have you compared the size of an Olympus OM2 with a 35mm digital lately? Not speaking of the viewfinder ...who the hell wants digital pictures from a film camera ???
Electro-Optic Camera (1988)
By 1987, Kodak had developed the world's first
megapixel CCD imager, the M1. A US Government
customer contracted with the Federal Systems Division
(FSD) to incorporate the M1 into a standard 35 mm
camera body to create the first megapixel portable
digital camera, truly the prototype of the digital
camera system (DCS) product line. It was designed for covert use, with the black box in a camera bag
and the ribbon cable to the camera body concealed inside the neck strap. Images were downloaded
from the internal hard drive by docking the black box on an Exabyte tape archive unit. (The first
digital camera dock!) The Canon F1 film camera body had no electronic interface, so the shutter
release was detected by monitoring the battery current. The imager package was mounted to a TE
cooler to reduce noise, but cooling was limited to prevent fogging the cover glass and was not very
effective. Only one unit was built. The black box electronics were wire wrapped.
- Stock Canon F1 body with motor drive
- Monochrome KAF-1400 (M1) imager (1320 x 1035, 6.8 µm) with thermoelectric cooler
- 10bit A/D Logarithmic amplifier
- 10-Mbyte buffer for 6-image burst; buffer image count display
- Internal 100-Mbyte SCSI hard drive holds 60 images; disk image count display
- Docking archive unit with 2000-MByte Exabyte 8 mm SCSI tape drive and battery charger
- Raw image files in Unix TAR format; Time/Date stamp
- Intervalometer; log histogram. Pixel value readout.
- Image delete. Image recover; disk erase; disk format
- Alphanumeric LCD with menus, status, and error messages
- Three-color LED disk, buffer, battery status indicators on camera back
- Intel 80C196 uController, PL/M
- Internal lead acid camcorder battery