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Isaboa Printed! Alaska!
The travelling camera club is an on going art project devoted to sharing a snapshot of our world. We post disposable camera's to a group of people all around the world, each person gets 5 photos then posts the camera onto the next person in the route.
Eventually the camera will make it back to the travelling camera club H.Q where it will get developed and the photos will be put online for everyone to see.
If you'd like to take part drop us an email at travellingcameraclub@googlemail.com
Telling us your name
Address
if you'd be willing to ship internationally
if you'd be willing to buy a camera
travellingcameraclub.tumblr.com/
I will be using this camera in week 449 of my 52 film cameras in 52 weeks project:
www.flickr.com/photos/tony_kemplen/collections/72157623113584240
Manufactured 1998 to 2000 by the Polaroid Corp. of Cambridge, Massachusetts. A disposable Polaroid camera! Based on the Captiva film pack (a.k.a. Polaroid 95 pack), the camera came preloaded with a 10 exposure pack for making approx. 2in x 3in prints. It also came with a large pre-paid envelope to send the camera back to Polaroid (via Chattanooga, Tennessee curiously) for recycling.
Of note: A design company won awards for this thing! See: www.ideo.com/portfolio/re.asp?x=50059
Single use camera , made in China . Film made in Germany . Expiration date 2000 . With pre-printed captions on the film (In Dutch) .
This is an old Konica single-use ("disposable") camera which I have re-loaded with film. The camera itself was made sometime during the 1990s, with a use-by date of "Sept 1995" on the cardboard cover.
The camera had been kicking around inside the trunk of a car for the last 20+ years. So the film was long expired and probably ruined from the heat during all those summers. I had my doubts if the camera was even going to work. Originally I was concerned that the camera's plastic parts might have melted, but luckily everything was fine.
I have re-loaded disposable camera's before and I have found the re-loading process can sometimes be tricky. Largely depending on the brand as different companies have different designs for their cameras. Unfortunately, I had to destroy the cardboard cover to open the camera. With this camera I needed to un-spool the film in complete darkness and insert the film canister into the reserve part of the chamber. Unloading was very easy, all I had to do was open up the camera and take out the film canister. I was able to re-load and re-use this camera about 8 or 9 times before the shutter mechanism stopped working (approx. 200 shots). The camera originally came loaded with 400 ISO film.
I am currently thinking about turning it into a pinhole camera.
Manufactured in 1990 by the Eastman Kodak Company. Part of the “Fling 35 Series Camera & Film All-In-One” group of cameras, the Stretch 35 was loaded with 12 exposures of 200 ISO Kodacolor Gold film. Designed to produce panoramic pictures, it took a narrow image in the center of a standard 35mm frame and was designed to be printed as a 3-1/5 x 10 inch print (the photofinisher just had to know and print the negative as if they were making an 8 x 10). If featured a wide peep sight for framing the picture.
Are disposable cameras collectable? First, they are a phenomena of the late 20th / early 21st century. The more proper term “Single Use Camera” and they brought photography to the truly occasional photographer. They became unique for the odd features and varieties. And their use is now engrained in our culture—who doesn’t put out several at their wedding reception for the guests to snap pictures of each other! And, by their specific nature, they are destroyed. So common today that they hang at every grocery checkout line, but one day they’ll be rare. You decide…
A parking lot in the beautiful city of nuremberg.
Single use camera (Kodak Funsaver).
Scan from negative, adjusted curves, no further processing.
Press L for view on black.
Watch my corresponding video on youtube (in German).
When i showed this picture to some friends
they all had a common assumption from first sight
" is this a DOLPHIN or a WHALE " !!!!
that reminded me of an old movie called " Free Willy " ..
and actually the one here is neither a dolphin nor a killer whale !!
this was my model Adam " an inborn diver " .
This is a Scanned picture
Taken with Kodak Ultra Sport Single-Use Camera
No texture, light or noise effects
Yes, some touches of contrast , color and curve tuning .
This is most popular disposable camera in the world.
"Utsurundesu 30th anniversary" is designed original style.
And, the baby is me. photo by my grand-pa.
I like these tourist groups queueing in front of famous sights and the facial expression of the two ladies especially :)
Single use camera (Kodak Funsaver).
Scan from negative, adjusted curves, no further processing.
Press L for view on black.
Watch my corresponding video on youtube (in German).