I joined ALPA in March last year as managing partner and I’m also an active artist and photographer.
The fully mechanical design is not retro chic. It’s a choice for certain photographic disciplines where precision and physical control matter more than speed or automation. E.g. architecture, landscape, art etc.
ALPA is a very small, niche manufacturer producing low volumes in Switzerland with tight mechanical tolerances and a focus on serviceability. It’s not intended as a general-purpose system. That’s by design.
As an amateur photographer, I can't see the scenario in landscape photography (the page pictures a beach) that would require extreme precision. Is it for measurements? This is a serious question. I can understand the appeal of a well machined, mechanical instrument, but not the precision and "control" angle.
Well according to the website you cannot buy a fully mechanical lens anymore so it doesn’t appear to be true that they sell cameras with zero electronic anymore
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 34.5 ms ] threadThe fully mechanical design is not retro chic. It’s a choice for certain photographic disciplines where precision and physical control matter more than speed or automation. E.g. architecture, landscape, art etc.
ALPA is a very small, niche manufacturer producing low volumes in Switzerland with tight mechanical tolerances and a focus on serviceability. It’s not intended as a general-purpose system. That’s by design.
Happy to add context if needed.
Do they manufacture the optics themselves too? Not sure I realised that.
Edit: just found this "ALPA cooperates with the acknowledged best manufacturers of large format lenses"