Contax's premium fixed-lens 35mm zoom compact — Zeiss Vario-Sonnar, autofocus, aperture-priority, 1993.
The Contax TVS is a compact fixed-lens 35mm camera introduced in 1993 under the Contax name, made by Kyocera. It extended the premium T line with a zoom lens and autofocus, fitting a Carl Zeiss Vario-Sonnar into a titanium-bodied compact. It became a sought-after cult compact valued for its Zeiss optics and build.
This is a fixed-lens 35mm compact with a Carl Zeiss Vario-Sonnar zoom lens and autofocus. It offers aperture-priority automatic exposure with electronic metering and a built-in flash, so it depends on a working battery to operate. The zoom lens and autofocus are motorised, and the lens is fixed and cannot be interchanged.
The TVS suits photographers who want a small, high-quality autofocus zoom compact for general, street, travel and documentary photography. The Zeiss zoom offers framing flexibility in a pocketable body, while aperture-priority control gives more input than a basic point-and-shoot.
As a high-value cult compact, buy carefully. Confirm the electronic metering, autofocus and zoom motor all operate with a fresh battery, and check the battery-door area for corrosion. Inspect the Zeiss zoom lens for haze and fungus, test the built-in flash, and check the LCD display for bleed or fade. Verify the light seals and that the lens extends and retracts cleanly.