View allAll Photos Tagged kodak
Kodak retina iiic
Film: Kodak Motion Picture 5207
Remjet Remove: Baking Soda + 1000ml 50C hot water
60 secs shaking +60 secs soak water
Develop:kodak c41,39C 3:40Mins
Blix: 8mins 39C
Wash: 3:00 mins
Stabilizer: 1min
Flo: 1 min
Scan:Epson V800
© All Rights Reserved
Canon T70 Camera - FD 35-105 mm 1:3,5 Lens
KODAK Prof 100 135/36 film
Developed and scanned via a local lab.
Lithprints on: Kodak Bromesko
9 papers, total of 65x65cm
Moersch SE 5
(images from old abandon glass negatives. Found on a flee market in France)
Last breath of summer with Kodak Colorplus 200
Trondheim, Norway
Mamiya 7ii
Kodak Colorplus 200
Dev; Kodak C-41
Developed and scanned at home
Picked up a Kodak Brownie Fiesta 127. We had one of these cameras years ago and used for all family outings and family photos and was the first camera I ever used back around 1974. At 9 years old I felt like a real photographer carrying this around on my shoulder and snapping photos 😄 Picked this one up and looking forward to using it again. My daughter and I also set up a darkroom to support our reentry into film and looking forward to developing our first batch of film soon. Will digitalize and post photos if they turn out 😊
My one and only shot of Monaco.
I was underwhelmed, but the train ride to and from Nice was oh so pretty.
October, 2003
Konica 35mm
Kodak film
Is everyone seeing this? Am I coming up on your Flickrs? My view counts, likes, etc. have been way down since the weekend. Waiting to hear from Flickr.
This is the most basic version of the Kodak Tourist. It has a fixed focus Kodet f12.2 lens and a Kodon shutter (2 blade) with a fixed shutter speed of 1/50th of a second.
Photo: Sony NEX-5N + Super Takumar 50mm, f1.4
The label inside the back cover of a Jiffy Kodak V P. The Jiffy Kodak V. P. is a Bakelite-bodied folding camera made by Kodak from 1935 to 1942.
"Macro Mondays" "Label"
This wonderful ghost sign is on the side of a brick building that now has a plumbing and heating business in Lewiston, Utah. It reads "The Lewiston Drug Co. Kodaks Rexall". This is just the third time I can recall finding a photography ghost sign. We are used to thinking of the word Kodak referring to film, but in the early days of the company, the word applied to the cameras themselves. So, this sign probably meant the drug store sold Kodak cameras.