This item is a daylight developing tank, manufactured by Minox and made of bakelite material. The tank comes with two rings to be used in the development of shorter 15 and 36 exposure lengths of film introduced in 1968 and 1969. The thermometer is no longer with the tank. The tank comes with original packaging.
Item consists of an Ernst Leitz Visoflex Mirror Reflex Attachment & Bellow with a black Hektor 13,5 cm. Includes original carrying case and a mechanical shutter release cable cord.
Item is a lens composed of 6 elements in 4 groups with a picture angle of 39 degrees. The distance scale is graduated in meters and feet up to 0.6 m and 2 feet. The aperture scale is 2.8 to 22 with a fully automatic aperture diaphragm. The lens is manufactured by Kyocera Corporation under the Contax brand name.
Item is a lens for 4 x 5 in. exposures on sheet film Schneider-Kreuznach symmar f6.8/130 mm. lens, Compur-Synchro shutter 1-1/500 sec. Includes 2 other lenses: Scheider-Kreuznach symmar 1:5.6 135 mm, and the other is 1:5.6 240mm. Both have Compur shutters. This camera is considered to be the ultimate for architecture and technical photography. It is still on the market and still used by professionals.
Item is a mechanical self timer that can be scewed into a cable release socket, providing variable delay in tripping of shutter. Timer comses with plastic case
Ceramic trays for processing photographic materials sizes 4 x 5 inches, there are two imprinted stamps on the side, "Canadian Kodak Co Ltd." and "4 x 5", the bottom of the trays are imprinted with "Made in Austria".
Item consists of two 22 exposure rolls of Kodak Verichrome Pan Film for Black-and-White Prints ASA 125 in original packaging. Develop before date is October 1976.
Item consists of a 19 exposure roll of Ektachrome-X Daylight or Blue Flash Ex 160 Colour Film for Colour Slides in original packaging. Develop before date is July 1976. Price sticker reads: "Toronto/ Camera / $1.79 each".
Item is a 2 1/4 x 3 1/4" compact folding plate camera. It was produced in Kodak's Stuttgart plant, along with the larger Recomar 33 during the 1930s. Designed to be used with plates or sheet film, it is an angular camera featuring black leather and metal casing, black leather bellows and metal clasps and slides. Equipped with Schneider lens.