Item consists of a compact, digital camera with a black metal body. Lens is a Canon zoom lens with 6 x optical and 2 x digital zoom, a shutter speed of 15 seconds to 1/1600 of a second, an aperture range of F3.2-F5.9, and an effective focal range of 6.4 x 38.4 mm. The CCD optical sensor has a resolution of 10.0 mega pixels and the ISO range is 80 to 1600. The camera includes a built-in TTL flash, requires two AA batteries. The camera originally sold for about $200.
Item is a red plastic 35mm camera branded with the McDonald's logo. The camera includes a photofinishing offer, and is marked as one of 500 35 mm Ronald McDonald Cameras.
Item is a black plastic camera, for 3 x 4 cm exposures on Bantam or Juka film and was a novelty camera marketed towards young amateur photographers. The actual image size is 32 x 40 mm. The camera includes a Meniscus f11/50mm lens.
Item consists of a Bell & Howell 240 motion picture camera. It is in a hard leather case also containing the manual and the case key. The camera uses 16mm film, has automatic exposure control, a 20mm lens, a self threading mechanism, has 32-fott film run and rapid winding crank, a reserve power indicator, and accepts a cable release.
Item consists of a Bauer C2-A Super motion picture camera. It used super 8mm film, which was one of the most popular home movie format for around 20 years. It has a Bauer Vario 1:1.8/7.5-60mm zoom lens, a built-in type-A filter, and a pistol grip. It runs at 12, 18 or 24 fps. It has a through-the-lens focusing system.
Item consists of a Bell & Howell Two Fifty Two motion picture camera. It takes 8mm film, and has a Bell & Howell Super-Comat 10mm f/2.3 lens. There is a dial on the front of the camera to select aperture, light settings, and black & white or colour. It has a two-toned brown body and a winding knob on the side.
Item consists of a Cine-Kodak Eight Model 60. One of the first movie cameras made by Kodak for 8mm film, it provided a cheap and portable option for home-movie makers compared to 16mm film.
Item consists of a Kodak Instamatic M14 compact motion picture camera. It was used with silent Super 8 film cartridges and has a 14mm f/2.7 Kodak Ektanar Lens. There is the option to attach a pistol grip for easier hand-held filming.
Item consists of a Kodak Instamatic M26. It is a motion picture camera that uses a silent super 8 film cartridge and has a Kodak Ektanar 13mm f/1.8 lens. It has a 28.5mm filter, fixed focus, an under-exposure warning signal that shows in the viewfinder, auto exposure control, 18 frames per second film speed, and a cable release socket. It is the same as the Kodak Instamatic M24, but features a different lens.
Item is a hand-held motion picture camera for filming motion pictures on 8mm film. Includes a 13mm f/2.:3 Kodak Ektanar Lens with aperture selector wheel.
Item is a double 8 cine camera taking 25' spools, optical eye-level finder and spring motor with Reichert Solar f1.9/12.5 mm. This item was produced in the late 1950's and is accompanied by a leather bag, original user's manual and orange lens filter. Written in the small pocket of the bag : Alfred Silverman, 44 Barclay RD, Downsview, Ont. Small knob on the back used to record.
Item is a metal and plastic 8mm cine camera with active 8 mm film still inside.To wind film raise the winding lever and turn it until motor is wound tight. A push down trigger on the right side is used to shoot film. 1/2" f1.9 uni-focus. There is a cover lock designed to open body of object that conceals film spools. A exposure guide is branded into item. Written on object : 8 mm Keystone Boston 24, Mass Capri K-30 630996
Item consists of 3 copies of an illustrated black-and-white promotional brochure detailing the history of Eastman Kodak's products and found, George Eastman.
Item consists of an 8, 12 or 16 exposure roll of Kodak Verichrome Pan Film for Black-and-White Prints ASA 125 in original packaging. Develop before date is indicipherable.
Item consists of an 8 exposure roll of Kodacolor II Color Negative Film for Color Prints C828 in original packaging. Develop before date is January 1977.
Item consists of a sleeve for two dozen 3 1/2 x 3 1/2 inch Eastman Kodak Co. Solio Paper for export. A sticker on the front of the envelope reads "Cochran / Photo Supplies. / Hamilton, Ont." and stamped on the verso (extremely faded) reads: "This paper will not be [illegible] for / any fault of manufacture after / APR 27 1900 / EMULSION NO. 18758 / PACKED BY NO. 26".
Item consists of a 2MB Kodak Picture Card. It could be used to store and share digital pictures. Works with standard CompactFlash ATA compatible digital cameras. In original packaging.
Item is a sealed package of twelve 5 x 7 sheets of Kodak Velox E2 single weight sensitized photographic paper, produced ca. 1943 by Canadian Kodak Co., Limited. Item is stamped with the expiry date Oct. 1, 1943.
Item is a clear glass tray for developing photographic prints. A removable glass dowel holds the paper down so it remains inmmersed in the chemical solutions. Sold by the E. & H.T. Anthony company in New York.
Item is a brown glass bottle formally containing five pounds of acetic acid for photographic development. Manufactured by the Canadian Kodak Company, Ltd.
Item is a camera for making enlargements up to 16.5 x 21.6 cm (6.5 x 8.5 inches), using daylight. The product was marketed to amateur photographers as there was no need for a darkroom setup to produce the images. The No. 1 Enlarging Camera sold for $15.00 in 1904.
Item is a transparent sheet printed with an Eastman Kodak Gammeter, a set of indexed graph lines. Gammeters were designed to aid in the dye transfer process by allowing the easy calculation of gammas (colour contrasts) from plotted curves.
File contains to copy prints of the patent for a camera issued to George Eastman on September 4, 1888. George Eastman invented the first Kodak camera 100 years ago. He was issued US patent number 388,850.
Item is a print with the caption: Workers in the early 1900s assembling the Number 4A folding Kodak camera, considered to be the ancestor of all modern folding roll cameras.
Item is a print featuring an image with the caption: The first Kodak camera, introduced in 1888, sold for $25, loaded with enough Eastman film for 100 exposures. It produced a 2 1/2 inch diameter negative.
Item consists of an 8, 12, or 16 exposure roll of Kodak Verichrome PAN film for black-and-white prints in original packaging. Develop before date is June 1976.
Item consists of a 24 exposure roll of 35 mm Kodachrome 200 High Speed Film for Color Slides in original packaging. Develop before date is February 1995.
Item consists of a 12 exposure roll of 35 mm Kodak Gold Plus 100 film for color prints in original packaging. Features a sponsorship symbol for the Victoria 1994 Commonwealth Games.
Item is the first Mercury model camera created by the Universal Camera Corp. It takes 18 x 24 mm vertical exposures on Universal No. 200 film, a special 35 mm wide film. The camera has a Wollensak Tricor Anastigmat f3.5/35mm and a rotating focal-plane 1/20-1/1000 shutter.
1 Olympus 55mm Skylight 1A 1 Fuji Film Light Balancing Filter A2 for Fujica Single-8 1 Kodak Series VII Daylight Filter for Type A film 1 Kodak Series VI color compensating filter CC-10M 1 Kodak Series VI yello color filter 1 Omag filter 40 1 Canon close up lens uv filter 72mm 1100 1 Kenko LBW10 49 orange filter 1 Kodak #2 yellow filter (glass only) 1 Kodak Series VI Kodachrome Haze filter 1 Kodak #13 Close-up attachment 1 Kodak Series V Wratten Filter 1 Kodak Wrattan filter # 54 B 1 Kodak series VI adapter ring 31.5mm 1 Kodak Series 4 daylight filter for type A color films No. 85 1 Kodak Close-up attachment No. 6A 1 Kodak Series VI adapter ring 31.5mm with UV filter 1 Kodak Series V wratten filter A 1 Kodak orange filter, glass only 1 Kodak cloud filter No. 13 1 Kodak Series 5 daylight filter for type F color film 1 Kodak Series 6 Skylight filter No. 1A 1 Kodak Series VI Wratten filter No. 85B 1 Hoya 40.5 85B 1 walz UV filter 1 EdnaLite filter 514 1 EdnaLite filter 601 1 Voigtlander G1/37 mm 1 Walz red filter for Argus C-3 1 Walz #112 1A filter 1 Kodak Series VI color compensating filter CC-05M 1 Kodak Series VI color compensating filter CC-10C 1 Eumig Makro filter 1 Zeiss Ikon 351/6 graduated yellow filter 1 Carl Zeiss Jena Proxar 0.67 x 37 1 Zeiss Ikon 988/12 yellow filter 1 Sharplite optical filters Type A 21.5 1 Harrison corrector disc 1 Minolta color filter set for Minolta-16 II 1 Polaroid light polarizing series VI filter 1 Kodak Wratten gelatin No. 1A Skylight filter 1 Lee filters sample set 1 roscolene filter sample set 1 Minolta filter set 1 Canon 72mm No. 4x 1 Zeiss Ikon Contapol 4x polarizing filter 1 No. 1 58mm filter 1 Kodak series VI wrattan filter A red filter 1 Aroma 55mm No. 2 filter 1 Optex 52mm UV filtre 1 1 m - 40" filter 1 2 m - 80" 1 Tiffen 49mm Hazan filter 1 B+W 50mm ES 101 filter 2 Toshiba 52mm SL-1A filter 1 Kodak series V adapter ring 25.5mm with series V wrattan filter no. 85 B 1 Sepia filter (glass only) 1 Kodak FIV/32 -1.5 L=3x orange filter 1 Lifa Tagesslicht 1 red filter (glass only) 1 Impakt 1A 55mm filter 1 Toshiba 52mm SL-1A 1 yellow filter (glass only) 1 Tiffen 67mm 80 B blue filter 1 Toshiba 72mm SL-1A filter 1 set of Crown 52mm close up filters 1 Utilo filter Wratten K-2 No. 8 yellow filter 1 set Kodak Cmbinaion filter series VI
Item consists of a 12 pack of Philips Magicubes. They introduced in 1970 as an improvement on flashcubes. As oppsed to being fired electrically by batteries, they were fired mechanically by a small bar striking a pin coated in fulminating material. This advancement made cheap flash cameras possible. They were used in cameras such as the Kodak Instamatic and the Agfa Autostar X-126, among others.
Item is an electronic flash unit designed for 35mm cameras, with hot shoe and cord attachment options. Item includes original packaging and users manual.
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.
The item is constructed from two pieces of black metal with rectangular and square openings to be used with 3 1/2 x 5 inch photographic paper to produce two different sizes of prints .
Item is a group of accessories to be used with a photographic enlarger. Individual pieces include filter holders, negative holders, andfocusing lenses.