![]() It is designed for a no-longer available mercury battery, however modern alkaline replacements work fine. It only has three manual shutter speeds, and that's stretching it. The only gotchas are that the Electro 35 has no auto-exposure lock and it's an almost all-auto camera. It's quieter and and has less vibration than any of the clumsier focal-plane shutters of Leica and Nikon rangefinders, and no flipping mirrors like every DSLR. ![]() Pick your aperture, and the Yashica Electro 35 selects the shutter speed, from 1/500 up to thirty seconds or more! The Yashica Electro 35 is an aperture-priority camera. ![]() The Yashica Electro 35 was designed for consumers, but the great news for serious photographers is that the advanced features it had in 1966 are just what we need, and it doesn't have any of today's junk features that just get in the way. It has a much clearer finder than the Nikon manual rangefinders of the 1950s that fetch astronomical prices from geriatric collectors. It has a big, clear viewfinder and rangefinder. The Yashica Electro 35 is a solid metal camera. Yashica sold eight million of these in various versions over 15 years. ![]() They took it all over the world on their vacations, and came back with loads of great slides.Įveryone's grandparents had one. The Yashica Electro 35 was one of the most popular consumer 35mm cameras of the 1960s and 1970s. Intro History Specs Accessories Performance Usage Recommendations
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