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kodak ek6 instant camera

Canon T2i with eyepiece extender, battery grip (with two batteries inside), Canon 50MM 1.8 lens and lens hood.

 

You'll notice that the battery grip is ever so slightly different in color than the camera body. That's because it's not a Canon part. The Canon grip is $199, but this no-name brand from Amazon was $69 and comes with two batteries!

Manufactured by the Nimslo Camera Co of Atlanta, Georgia. A 35mm viewfinder lenticular stereo camera introduced about 1980. The company ceased operations in 1994. Using it’s “Quadra Lens” system and electronically controlled shutter, it captured four similar, but off angle images on 35mm film. The film had to receive “Nimslo processing” where the images were combined in a special printing process on a lenticular imprinted paper (actually, the “paper” was exposed from the back, developed and then coated). The camera has a metal core but cheaper plastic trim making it seem a bit flimsy for the $280 asking price new. Celebrity Barry Manalow was a big fan of the pictures and purchased as many of the film mailers as he could when he found a store that carried them…

 

See also: www.stereoscopy.com/cameras/nimslo.html

  

Very handy for macro photos out in the sunshine. Will now live on perched against a digital camera (with adaptation). No meter coupling, no batteries. Long live the mechanical photo gadgets, may they ever reign supreme.

Someone had a camera for Christmas!

Girl with camera. Model: Ioana. St. Augustine Lighthouse. St. Augustine. Florida. 2010. Nikon F5 + Nikkor 28mm f2.8 (manual, old) + KODAK PROFESSIONAL BW400CN Film. Ioana, she is a photographer too... She like shooting film. Model, photographer ... Greek Princess :))

 

Camera in Ioana's hands: Nikon Nikkormat FTn.

Black

 

Bought myself a new camera :). I also have a scanner to go with it :D. Super excited to use it!

 

I have my Radiopopper trigger mounted to it. I'm a little disappointed that this camera only has a sync speed of 1/60. Guess I need to invest in a leaf shutter lens!

Handmade Pinhole Camera

Format 6x9

Focal lenght 60mm

Pinhole 0,260

f/Stop 230

Angle 156°

Film back holder Graflex 23" / 120

Time to make room in the cupboards. Please Flickr mail me for details. Check the notes for info on each camera, and you can search my stream to see examples from each of the cameras. I am in Japan but willing to mail overseas. Especially interested in Contax, Fuji, Nikon or Olympus point-and-shoots, Mamiya RB67 backs and lenses, Nikon FM2 lenses, Mamiya C330 lenses or Image/Spectra film. However, will listen to any offers and answer any questions ; D

PAD 19.august.2006

 

My new (old) camera. The SX-70 cameras were manufactured in the 1970s and still they rock!

Snow in Seattle is a rare thing indeed. Cooper took this great photo with his collar camera.

 

Cooper's official blog: www.PhotographerCat.com | Cooper on Facebook

Buy Cooper's photo book, framed photos and more at Cooper's gallery store.

Image of girl taking photos

Life-size hand-carved Canon EOS 5D Mark II camera cake for a 25th birthday. Everything edible.

 

Rolleiflex SL66 Camera

can u find a Sony here???

I found this in an antique shope selling all the old thing u can imagine, and this was the backeground of his shope.

Kan elkalily- Cairo- egypt

unboxing my new camera in a stop motion mode.

*playback track isn't music or drums, it made by human mouth and voice.

رجعت من جديد بهالكام والفيديو بطريقة الستوب موشن ان شاء الله يعجبكم

*ملاحظه بسيطه: الخلفيه الصوتيه عبارة عن اصوات بشريه, ليست موسيقى او ايقاعات :)

Kodak Brownie 127 - Mk 1, second variant, 1956-1959.

 

One of the most popular Kodak cameras ever made :

www.brownie-camera.com/6.shtml

 

I used Gratispool back in the day - the developed film came back complete with a set of prints, free replacement film and paper negatives.....

www.photomemorabilia.co.uk/Gratispool.html

   

The Panasonic Lumix p&s camera is great for taking candid pics of these two.

This is very him at the moment, hiding from camera, and I love her arm here as well. Haha. They were reading together with the book lowered, but I was a second too slow to get a photo of that too, ha. They did look very sweet.

Another trip to the top of Twin Sisters, but Longs was once again shrouded with clouds. At least this time the clouds were interesting! Hopefully the third time will be the charm.

 

Click through to my blog to view a vertical comp of this shot and a long exposure taken during the hike back down...

 

erikpagephotography.com/blog/camera-shy/

Tainan, Taiwan; 2012

Camera : Leica M9P

Lens : Leica Elmarit-M 28mm f2.8

I love my cameras.

 

(the links are either photos of the camera or examples of photos I've taken with the camera.)

 

1. An old polaroid camera that I found at the church fete.

2. My grandads old camera.

3. Centon K200. Gift.

4. Canon EOS 500 N, belonged to a family friend.

5. Fisheye lomography camera. Gift.

6. Fujifilm Fotonex 265ix zoom. Church Fete.

7. Sony Cybershot. Birthday present.

 

taken with my canon 400d.

 

shit shot though......

 

life is exhausting at the moment.

Proof of concept, now, to turn it up to 11, and maybe add a few more cameras.

 

Worlds within worlds, viewfinders within viewfinders!

 

Shen-Hao 4x5 --> Yashica 124G w/close up lens on the viewfinder lens, which is upside down so that the picture is upright --> OM-D E-M5 w/ Contax-G 45mm Plannar with a Nikon 5T close up filter

Explored December 9, 2011 - 338/500

 

Nikon D5100 - my first "real" camera. Submission for Scavenger Hunt 101 - #83 My Camera

 

Thank you to everyone who viewed, commented and faved. You're all appreciated!

This is probably one of the coolest cameras I've ever bought. It's stylish, retro and yeah, the image quality is great! :-)

 

View On Black

Taken with a home-made pinhole camera made of an Ilford Pan 100 35mm x 30.5m box. (Thanks, Balazs Telek for the help in making the camera. :) )

  

on sheet film. contact sheet captured by DSLR

might be one of my favorites. love how it turned out...

 

www.etsy.com/shop/jayfish

Dig the composition and focus in this shot. The traffic lights in the lower right indicate this is near the intersection down the block. Taken by Cooper's collar camera.

 

Cooper's official blog: www.PhotographerCat.com | Cooper on Facebook

Buy Cooper's photo book, framed photos and more at Cooper's gallery store.

Homemade large format camera

  

The Eastman Kodak Company developed and manufactured this camera for use by the Office of Strategic Services (OSS). It was made in the shape of a matchbox of that era. It could be disguised by adding a matchbox label appropriate for the country in which it was to be used.

  

For more information on CIA history and this artifact please visit www.cia.gov

This is the "Photo Master" camera. It is a simple point-and-shoot roll film camera which was made by the "Monarch Manufacturing Company" of Chicago Illinois USA around 1940. This is one of the many models of inexpensive pocket-sized cameras produced by the Monarch Company during the 1930s, 40s and early 1950s.

 

The chassis itself is made entirely out of thick black molded bakelite, and is a common chassis design for low-priced pocket cameras produced during that era. It closely resembles the "Dasco", "Majestic", "Waldorf" and "Churchill", also produced by Monarch. Like the "Churchill" and the "Dasco" this camera was marketed as an inexpensive compact "candid minicam" camera. The only difference between the various models is the name printed on the front circular faceplate, because of this they are often referred to by collectors as "doughnut cameras". Monarch basically re-released the exact same camera under various names, without having to make design changes. This lowered production costs, which intern allowed Monarch to sell their cameras at a lower price. Monarch would even release cameras such as the "Dick Tracy" and "Brenda Starr Club Reporter" under the brand name of the "Seymour Products Company".

 

The camera features a built-in optical viewfinder with a metal face plate located on the front. The shutter mechanism is a simple fixed speed rotary/disc type shutter, and features two different exposure settings; "INST" (instant) and "TIME". The camera would have originally used "Vest Pocket Film" or "A8" (127 film) and would have made sixteen exposures (4 by 6.5 cm frames) on a standard roll of 127 film. The rear cover is the camera is clips onto the main chassis via two metal tabs and features two green exposure number viewing windows. The lens on the camera is a simple meniscus lens.

I love the fall colors hit by the sun. Apparently Cooper did too. Taken by his collar camera.

 

Cooper's official blog: www.PhotographerCat.com | Cooper on Facebook

Buy Cooper's photo book, framed photos and more at Cooper's gallery store.

Just got back into that disc of portraits with my and my then new baby. No longer blond, but the BW bender suggested I needed to play. And she does make me smile like that a lot... Taken by the divine Jake Shivery of Blue Moon Camera, Portland, OR.

Made by Lomo (not KMZ) for UK export (a rarer domestic Lomo 35F exists. 35mm 1:5.6 minitar-1 lens (same name but not spec of the Lomo LC-A's lens) is fixed focus with a fixed 1/125 shutter. The aperture is determined by film speed. 2xAA batteries power a low light LED and manually triggered flash. Slight variations during product run and seen in black and 2 hues of red.

on sale with other old things and antique in Marrakesh.

Film camera Zenit ET with Zenitar-M 1,7/50

my newest addition to my slowly-growing camera family: the nikon FM.

My newest, and fanciest camera, a Tachihara 4x5. I also picked up a 90mm f:8 Ilex Acugon for it. This lens doesn't have filter threads so after some grinding with a Dremel I was able to get a 72mm to 77mm step up ring onto the lens.

 

Lighting a flash shot through an umbrella camera right at full power and a flash bounced off a reflector from the bottom left at 1/4 power.

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