Friday, November 22, 2024

Pentax just launched its first film camera in two decades — and it looks like the ultimate travel companion

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Pentax, the legendary Japanese camera company founded in 1919 as Asahi Optical, hasn’t released a new film camera in more than 20 years. Given society’s move toward standalone digital cameras and ultimately, fully integrated smartphone cameras, this drought isn’t too surprising. 

However, with analog photography gaining in popularity over the past few years, particularly among millennials and Gen Z craving a more intentional creative process, it was only a matter of time before one of the OG camera companies took notice. 

Pentax’s new film camera, the Pentax 17, isn’t a rehash of an existing camera from the archive but a totally new model, built from the ground up and designed by one of the brand’s legendary engineers, Toshiyuki Kitazawa. He happened to come out of retirement to work on the project and drop some knowledge on the current generation of Pentax designers, much to the delight of analog camera nerds everywhere.

(Image credit: Ricoh/Pentax)

I had the chance to learn about the new Pentax 17 prior to launch, and though I’ve yet to get one in my hands, I’m seriously impressed by all the little things Pentax seemingly got right, from making it a half-frame model with double the shots to constructing it out of premium materials built to last.

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