A Kodak advertisement on poster board: At Christmas, 1917, new AUTOGRAPHIC KODAK Cameras made wives ecstatic. It's the same now, every Christmas, with KODAK INSTAMATIC Cameras
A Kodak advertisement on poster board: "In 1907, a young lover had to borrow the family's No. 2 BROWNIE Camera. Now it's easy for him to own inexpensive KODAK INSTAMATIC 44 Camera - - which is easier to hold and use than a BROWNIE Camera ever was"
Item consists of a poster featuring an image of a woman threading film onto the sppol of a camera. Beneath the image reads: When cars had wooden wheels, you had to thread film onto a spool. / Now you can just drop a cartridge into any KODAK INSTAMATIC / Camera and start shooting.
Item consists of a poster featuring an image of a man taking a photograph of two women on a beach in 1923, using an electric-eye instamatic camera. Beneath the image reads: In 1923, you had to fiddle around and set exposure for sun or shade. / Now any electric-eye KODAK INSTAMATIC Camera measures the / light and sets the exposure for you automatically -- for black-and-white / and color pictures, and color slides.
Item consists of a french version of the board poster for the Kodak Trimlite Instamatic 48. The slogan on the poster reads "Au travail ou aux loisirs".
Item consists of a poster board advertising the Kodak Trimlite Instamatic 48 camera. The main slogan on the poster reads "Works all week. Plays on the weekend." and in smaller font is a more detailed description of the features of the camera, including Flip Flash. The poster features an image of the camera resting upon blueprints and an architectural photograph, overlapped by a photograph of a family on a sail boat.