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Vintage Delight

  • Writer: tonithgabutan
    tonithgabutan
  • Mar 28, 2019
  • 3 min read

Regula Werk King

Regula Werk King KG L 35mm Camera with Isco-Gottingen Color-Isconar, 45mm f/2.8 Lens in Prontor SVS-made in Germany during the 60s.


Bencini Comet

The Bencini Comet cameras were 127 film made in Italy by CMF Bencini from 1948 into the 1950s. They were smaller versions of the Bencini Koroll range. Controls were limited to 1/50 instantaneous or B shutter and a focusing lens. The Comet III was an unusual vertical format camera. There were various models: Model Format Introduced Comet 4x4cm c.1948 Comet II 3x4cm c.1951 Comet S 3x4 c.1950 Comet Rapid Comet 3 (Fixed-focus) 3x4cm c.1953 Comet III focusing 3x4cm c.1953 The Comet name was reused later for 126 cartridge cameras; see the 126 section of the Bencini page, and still later for 35mm cameras.



Six-20 Brownie Model C - Kodak Brownie

Type: Box rollfilm

Introduced: 1946

Discontinued: 1957

Film size: 620

Picture size: 2 1/4 X 3 1/4"

Manufactured: UK

Lens: Meniscus f/11, 100mm

Shutter: Single blade

Numbers made: ?

Original price: ?

Description: Morocco-grained imitation leather covered metal body; two brilliant finders. 1946-53: plain matt enamel front; metal wind knob and release button. 1953-57: horizontally striped front; plastic wind knob and release button; triangular spring back catch.


Mamiya NC1000S

The Mamiya nc1000s. Mamiya is a name that resonates pretty strongly when it comes to medium format film. Their cameras have been considered a staple of medium format for ages. ... The camera that we are discussing does not consume 120 or 220 film, but rather 35mm.


Nikon L35AF

Introduced in 1983, the L35AF was Nikon's very first AF compact.


MINOLTA X-370s

The MINOLTA X-370s was the last lower budget SLR camera bodies built for Minolta's manual focus Rokkor-lenses. It offered automatic exposure in an aperture preferred mode. Manual selection of aperture and shutter speed was also possible. The camera body was made in China, maybe by Seagull, the company which once got certain assets from Minolta for producing Minolta-like SLR camera bodies.



Kodak Instamatic 25

The Kodak Instamatic 25 Camera is a viewfinder camera for Kodapak film cartridges. The Instamatic 26 is a similar camera, but sold only through premium schemes. These are an early part of a long line of Instamatics - the 25 replacing the first Instamatic, the Instamatic 50. The Instamatic 25 was made from 1966 to 1972 by Kodak Ltd. (England) and Kodak Spain, to a design for the camera externals by Kenneth Grange. The Internals, including shutter mechanism were designed by Alex Gow. The camera has a two-speed shutter. Its speed selector can be shifted from the sun symbol (1/90 sec.) to the half-sun symbol (1/40 sec.) . The Kodak 1:11/43mm lens has fixed focusing and fixed aperture. The viewfinder is of reverse Galilean type. The flash shoe is for Kodalux bulb flashes. The camera weighs only 150 g.


Agfamatic 1008 Tele Pocket

Agfa made several related Agfamatic Pocket models, all for drop-in 110 cartridge film: Agfamatic 1000 pocket sensor was the basic model, using magicubes; Agfamatic 1000S pocket sensor, similar but when closed showing a dummy red button; the Agfamatic 1008 pocket sensor which used flipflashes instead of flashcubes, and the Agfamatic 1008 tele pocket sensor with tele mode. Probably one model of the Agfamatic 1008 pocket sensor was made in Brazil.


Kodak Instamatic 155X

The Instamatic is a series of inexpensive, easy-to-load 126 and 110 cameras made by Kodak beginning in 1963. The Instamatic was immensely successful, introducing a generation to low-cost photography and spawning numerous imitators.


Goldy Objectif Menisque 6x9 Box

Old 6x9 Ets Goldstein camera. A simple device intended for a general public, often not very fortunate. Made in France.


Canon Sure Shot 60 Zoom

35mm point-and-shoot camera; 38 to 60mm zoom; Automatic flash; 5-point distance measurement autofocus; Large viewfinder with real-image viewing.


Minolta Riva AF 35

The Minolta Riva AF 35, Freedom AF 35 in America or Mac 35 in Japan, is a cheap autofocus compact camera released around 1990. It is a full-auto camera, meaning auto-loading, auto-advance, auto-rewind, auto-flash, auto-exposure and auto-focus. It has a built-in flash and self-timer. The lens is protected by a sliding cover. Like so many Minolta cameras of the same age, it only exposes films at ISO 100 or ISO 400. A dateback version was also available.

 
 
 

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