Mamiya RZ67

The RZ67's Sekor lenses have built-in electronic leaf shutters which are cocked and triggered from the body.

Mirror lock up is supported for long exposures and macro photography.

The body has one standard flash hot shoe on its left side, one plug for a standard shutter cable release, and a PC socket for an electronic shutter trigger.

The RZ67 name is adopted from the model name of the Mamiya RB67 (in which RB stands for "Revolving Back"), which was first introduced in 1970.

Similar to the RB67, the RZ67 film backs can be rotated 90 degrees to provide a horizontal or vertical composition.

The viewfinder also hosts LEDs informing of the state of the camera (flash ready, low battery, dark slide not removed, shutter not cocked).

Original RZ67 Professional (RZ67 Pro I): RZ67 Professional II (RZ67 Pro II): RZ67 Professional IID (RZ67 Pro IID): There are a wide variety of lenses available for the RZ67: All lenses have internal electronic Seiko #1 shutters with a maximum 1/400 sec speed, PC-type X flash sync plug, T-switch for long exposures, a plug for a standard cable release for B exposures, depth of field preview lever, distance scale, aperture adjust ring.

Seen by millions of people every day, this photo was taken by photographer Charles O'Rear in 1996.