- 2005.006.19.02
- Stuk
- [ca. 1929]
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a hand-held movie camera produced by Kodak for amateur use. Two-speed shutter could shoot 8 and 16 fps. Anastigmatic lens 25mm f/1.9 - f/16.
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Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a hand-held movie camera produced by Kodak for amateur use. Two-speed shutter could shoot 8 and 16 fps. Anastigmatic lens 25mm f/1.9 - f/16.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item consists of a Cine-Kodak Magazine 8 Camera. It was introduced in the United States in 1946 and manufactured until 1955. It is a clockwork-driven camera capable of running at 16, 26, 32 and 64 frames per second. It has a Kodak Anastigmat f:1.9 13mm lens. The lens is interchangeable and the wheel at the top of the camera is used to alter the viewfinder image according to the focal length. On the side is a universal guide for different types of daylight.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a black leather wooden box-style magazine camera for 4x5 inch plates. The camera has a meniscus lens, a time and instantaneous shutter, and two reflecting type viewfinders. This camera model was made by the Western Camera Manufacturing Company prior to 1899 when it became part of the Rochester Optical & Camera Company.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item consists of a brick-shaped brown plastic camera. It creates 40 24 x 32 mm exposures on 35 mm film in special cassttes. The camera uses a Graf Anastigmat f7/7/40 mm lens with a single-speed shutter that trips by counterclockwise motion on the winding crank.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a wooden, leather-covered Waterbury Improved Detective Camera. The design is a simple box format with film holders accessed through a door at the rear, and shutter assembly inside the front of box. On the inside of the plate holder door, a sticker reads "Caution, This film must be developed before Jan. 1st, 1900."
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a small, flat, hand-held camera with black plastic body and brushed metal, gold-coloured front plate. Intended by Kodak to replace their instamatic line of cameras, the Kodak Disc cameras were designed to be simple to use, with all automatic functions. Took Disc film, a proprietary format that made 15, 11 x 8 mm exposures; this small negative size made the resulting prints very grainy when enlarged and the camera model was not Kodak's most popular. Item has a built in flash and wrist strap. In plastic display original packaging. Uses HR disc.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a subminiature vext-pocket folding camera for No. 00 rollfilm with an oxidized silver front plate and a Duo Achromatic lens. It originally sold for $1.95 which was less than it's predecessor's, the Univex Model AF-3, price of $2.50.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a typical handheld camera using 5.7 inch roll film. The transport is by a built-in clockwork (one shot at a time) to be wound by a large lever at the left of the body to generate a flat film plane. Some suction is generated during exposure. Shutter is made by Ilex (Rochester NY) 1/125, 1/250, 1/500 sec.The lens is also by Ilex Optical Co - Paragon Anasigmat f6.3. Accessories include 1 38mm Yellow Filter and 2 Metal Slides.
View-Master Personal Stereo Camera
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a black stereo camera for making your own View-Master slides. Film was wound twice through the camera with lenses raised/lowered for each pass. The camera make 69 stereo pairs of 12 x 13 mm exposures. It features a matched view-master anastigmat f3.5/25 mm coated lenses and has a 1/10-1/100 shutter.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a black single lens reflex camera for 2.25" x 2.5" exposures on 120 rollfilm. Camera uses a B&L Tessar f3.5/75 mm lens and a focal-plane shutter. The series II has cable release, mirror set lever at operator's left of hood and a sliding ruby window cover.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a typical mass-produced, self-erecting, folding roll film camera for amateur use. Made 8 5.7 x 8.25 exposures on 620 roll film, but could be converted for other formats with the Kodak Tourist Adapter Kit.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a folding trellis strut camera from the Vest Pocket series for 4.5 x 6 cm (1.77" x 2.36") exposures on 127 roll film. Lens is a Kodak Anastigmat 84mm f4.7, with a ball-bearing shutter with B,T, 1/25, 1/50, etc.. A case in included.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a folding camera with brown bellows and covering, for 2.25" x 3.25" exposures on rollfilm.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a metal folding camera with black bellows for 2.25" x 3.25" exposures. Camera uses a Pocket Automatic shutter and has win sprung struts for the lensboard.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a black leather-covered aluminum-bodied folding-bed camera for filmpacks. The bed folds down but not to a full 90 degree angle. The camera has no tracks on the bed but the front standard pulls out and clips into two slots at the front. The front slot is for taking photographs of objects that are 6 to 20 feet away and the back slot is for objects more than 20 feet away. The item uses a ball bearing lens.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a black imitation leather-covered wooden folding camera for 3 1/4 x 4 1/4" exposures, on No. 124 film. The camera has red cloth bellows and was originally priced at $9.00 USD.
Eastman Kodak Company
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is an inexpensive box camera made of fiberboard and covered with imitation leather. The camera has a Gallileo-type viewfinder only (no brilliant viewfinder), flash contacts, and a single speed shutter that is fast enough to accommodate bulb flashes. It used 120 size roll film.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a simple box camera designed to mimic the look of a twin lens camera. The topmost "lens" is in fact a brilliant viewfinder, the lens is a "colour corrected" Bohmar Precision lens (74mm) allows no focusing.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item consists of a Kodak Medalist I. It is a 620 film, with a bright finder than attempts to combine the magnified rangefinder and the minified viewfinder. The camera was built during the war and was nicknamed the American Leica, for the design criteria that good pictures could save the lives of soldiers, and the Medalist could take them. It is a medium format, roll film camera with a sharp, multicoated lens, and a rigid aluminum and steel body. The camera has a unique double helical lens tube in place of cloth bellows.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item consists of a Kodak No. 2-C Brownie Model A box camera. The camera used 130 roll film for an image size of 5.715 x 10.795 cm. It has a standard Meniscus achromatic lens and a rotary shutter.
Kodak Fiftieth Anniversary Box Brownie
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item consists of a Kodak Fiftieth Anniversary Brownie box camera. It was a commemorative edition Brownie camera that was handed out to children at fairs in the United States during the 1930s. The body of the camera is card covered in brown leatherette, and features a silver seal for the fiftieth anniversary of the Eastman Kodak Company, from 1880 to 1930. It is a simple camera that used 120 medium format film.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a mock twin lens reflex camera with Bakelite body and metal fittings, for use with 620 roll film. Designed to mimic the look of a twin lens camera, the topmost "lens" is in fact a brilliant viewfinder. Camera has a fixed focus Kodet lens.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a 35mm camera. Very solid and durable design, similar to the box camera.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a 35mm camera with Kodak Anastigmant 50mm f3.5 lens with flash synchrozied shutter
Eastman Kodak Company
Kodak Electric 8 Zoom Reflex Movie Camera
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item consists of a Kodak Electric 8 Zoom Reflex Movie Camera. It was manufactured from 1961 to 1967. It is an 8mm camera with a P. Angenieux Paris f.6.5-52mm 1:1.8 Angenieux-Zoom lens with original lens cap. It used a clockwork motor and shot 25 feet rolls of 8mm film at 16 frames per second. Some paint is beginning to peel. When the camera was first released it cost approximately $139.95, about $900 today.
Keystone 16mm Film movie camera, model 7
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item consists of a 16mm motion picture camera, Model 7 made by Keystone Manufacturing Company in Boston Massachusetts in 1937. The company was an American manufacturer known for movie cameras with built-in electronic flash in the 1930s. The camera features a summer exposure guide on the front and has a Switar 1:1.8 f=16mm lens.
Cine-Kodak Magazine 8 Camera outfit case
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item consists of a Cine-Kodak Magazine 8 Camera. It was introduced in the United States in 1946 and manufactured until 1955. It is a clockwork-driven camera capable of running at 16, 26, 32 and 64 frames per second. It has a Kodak Cine Ektanon Lens 13mm f/1.9. The lens is interchangeable and the wheel at the top of the camera is used to alter the viewfinder image according to the focal length. On the side is a universal guide for different types of daylight. It is in a hard brown case with filters, a second lens, a manual, purchase receipts and an adaptor ring.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item consists of a Cine-Kodak Model B. It is the follow-up model to the Cine-Kodak, the first 16mm camera. As opposed to the Cine-Kodak, the motor Cine-Kodak Model B is spring-driven rather than hand-cranked, which allowed for it to be used without a tripod. It has an f/3.5 20mm lens and a Newton finder. It has a portrait attachment for close ups from 2 to 5 feet.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item consists of a Cine-Kodak Magazine 16 motion picture camera. It used 16mm film and was Kodak's first personal movie camera. It has a Kodak Anastigmat f:1.9 25mm lens and can film at 16, 32 or 64 fps. It winds with a fold down crank. The body is metal covered with black leather.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item consists of a Cine-Kodak Model B 16mm motion picture camera. It was the follow-up to the Cine-Kodak, the world's first 16mm movie camera, featuring a spring motor. The body is an aluminum box covered in black leatherette.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item consists of a Kodak XL 330. It is a silent super 8 motion picture camera with a Kodak Ektar f/1.2 9mm lens and fixed focus. It has an adjustable eyepiece, a filming speed of 18 frames per second, a film counter, a battery check button and a tripod socket. It works with 4 AA batteries.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a hand-held metal and leather motion picture camera for filming motion pictures on 16mm film. Includes a 25mm f/2.3 Kodak Ektanon Lens and adjustable viewfinder.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a die-cast metal cine camera with a black finish. It has an interchangeable f5.6 Ilex Univar lens and a collapsible viewfinder. The camcorder uses Univex 30' patented spools of Single-8 film.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a blue leather covered metal body motion picture camera for 16 mm film using 50' spools. It features a Newton finder and an interchangeable f1.9/25 mm Kodak Anastigmat lens. The camera uses a spring motor to capture 8,16 frames per second.
Portrait of man seated on stone wall
Item is a dark green cabinet card with gold letterpress, "Strong/ INSTANTANEOUS PHOTOGRAPHS/ Vance Block, Eureka, Cal." Photograph shows a man leaning against a low stone balustrated, with one leg up. Blurred backdrop with trees behind him.
Vance Block, Strong Studio
Portrait of two young men in suits
Item consists of a brownish green card with small oval photograph pasted on. Image is of two young men in pinstriped suits, also shown in 2008.001.112. Embossed at lower right of card, in black, "Studebaker/ 142 N. MAIN ST./ WICHITA." On verso, handwritten in pencil, sideways, "MARY A Ydene".
Studebaker
Portrait of man with beard and checkered bowtie
Item is a cream cabinet card with gold letterpress at bottom, "Baldwin & Son/ 118 Douglass Ave., WICHITA, KAS." Photograph shows a man with close-cropped hair and a long beard, wearing a checkered bowtie and a plain suit. Back of card is pink.
Baldwin & Son
Polaroid Land camera, Automatic 103
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a folding automatic snapshot camera for instant photographs using Polaroid 100-series Packfilm. Grey plastic body with rangefinder on top.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a snapshot camera for instant photographs with Polaroid 100 series packfilm. Uses "blue dot" flashcubes.
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a point and shoot camera for instant photographs on the proprietary PR10 Kodak instant film. It has a vertically oriented body in black and grey with a folded optical path. Focusing was through a F11/137mm lens. Had a flipflash socket on top. A hand crank ejected the photos. This model was part of a series that was Kodak's response to the successful instant cameras produced by Polaroid. A patent infringement case was brought against Kodak by Polaroid in 1977 and was finally settled in 1986, in Polaroid's favour. Kodak recalled all their instant cameras, offering customers a new camera or a rebate in exchange. A further, class action, lawsuit by consumers followed, resulting in Kodak further offering cash or credit for the return of the Kodak nameplate. While this item still has it's Kodak nameplate, many Kodak instant cameras do not.
Kodak
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a single lens reflex, folding Land camera for instant pictures using Polaroid SX-70 film. The basic folding design was not new, but similar to the "Excentric" camera of R. Guenault (ca. 1905). This compact model incorporates SLR focusing to 10 1/2", automatic exposure up to 14 seconds, and motorized print-ejection, all powered by a disposable flat battery, which came hidden in the film back. Includes manual and German advertisement.
Polaroid Corporation
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a folding field camera for exposures on 8x10 plates, manufactured by the Rochester Optical and Camera Company. Wood camera with red bellows and brass hardware. Created for advanced amateur and professional photographers, the back was reversible to allow the photographer to photograph in both landscape and portrait orientations and had adjustable tilt to account for distortion. Includes a Ross f8-64 lens.
No. 3A Autographic Kodak camera, Model C
Part of Heritage Camera Collection
Item is a folding camera with black leatherette case and leather bellows. Features a cord with metal push button shutter-release. Fitted with a Kodak Antistigmat lens f7.7 (170mm), No. 11592. Took Autographic film No. A-122. Serial no. 652261.
Lantern slide, glass slide in wood frame. Image area is circular as is the hole in the wood frame. Illustration is hand painted onto the glass. Only information on slide is carved into wood frame "T.H. McAllister Optician N.Y." Illustration of a bar scene, with an American flag hanging above the bar. There's men standing beside a bar, with a bartender standing behind it. Looks like the men are arguing, and one of the seated men a glass broken on his head, and there's blood. There's a dog in the foreground barking at the men.
Orange cardboard tubes have grey labels printed with black ink: "M - Q DEVELOPER TUBES, Adapted to any make of Dry Plates, Films, Developing and Bromide Papers. PAPER, FILMS AND PLATES -- Dissolve thoroughly in Five ounces of water the contents of red end of tube. Then add and dissolve remainder."
Ansco Company
Item is a publicity portrait print of Betty Burroughs, taken by theatrical photographer Nasib. Inscriptions in white on surface of print read, 'Betty Burroughs' and 'NASIB 7'. Inscription on back in pencil reads 'Betty Burro-' and in purple stamp, 'Wine, Woman and Song' and 'Photo for newspapers only'.
Nasib
Item is a full length portrait of girl on iceskates wearing a butterfly costume with wings spread. Imprint on surface reads, 'White Studio 48 Broadway, New York.' Inscription in pencil on back reads, '31, 98, 11'
White Studio
Portrait of man with cane. Inscription in purple type on back reads, 'Henry Glosser, 890 Broadway, New York. Negative preserved.'
Item is a portrait of woman in Victorian dress sitting in a chair. Black text below photograph reads, 'Glosser, 827 Broadway.'
CDV size card with albumen image. Image is the invention of Zadoc P. Dederick. Inscription on verso "Geo. O. Bedford's Park Gallery, 166 Broad St., Newark, N.J. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1868, by Zadoc P. Dederick, in the clerk's office of the District Court for the district of New Jersey." Dederick invented The Steam Man and patented him in March of 1868. The Steam Man was a steam powered pair of legs rigidly attached on a horizontal swivel to the front of a carriage. Hence the carriage was able to be steered. The body of the Man is the boiler and the driving cylinder is mounted on the back. Seems like this CDV was used along with the patent (#75874).
Geo. O. Bedford's Park Gallery
Cine-Kodak High Speed Super-XX Panchromatic Safety Film
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item consists of an empty carton for 50 feet of 16 mm Cine-Kodak High Speed Super-XX Panchromatic Safety Film. Develop before date is stamped May 17 1948. Inscribed in pencil on the verso reads: "Parts for Baincs-McDowall / Enlarger".
Kodak Canada Inc.
Kodak Fine Grain Positive Movie Film
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item consists of a 2 100 foot rolls of 16 mm Kodak Fine Grain Positive movie film in original packaging. Develop before dates are both July 1963.
Kodak Canada Inc.
Kodak Ektachrome Lummiere 100X Color Reversal Film
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item consists of a 36 exposure roll of 35 mm Ektachrome Lumiere 100X Professional Color Reversal Film in original packaging. Develop before date is June 1997.
Kodak Canada Inc.
Panatomic-X Professional Film fine grain black-and-white film
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item consists of an 8, 10, 12 or 16 exposure roll of Pantomic-X Professional Film Fine Grain Black-and-White Film FXP 120 in original packaging. Develop before date is June 1979.
Kodak Canada Inc.
Professional Color Reversal Film Kodachrome 200
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item consists of a 36 exposure rolls of 35 mm Kodachrome Professional Color Reversal 200 Film in original packaging. Develop before date is October 1988.
Kodak Canada Inc.
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item consists of an undeveloped, exposed roll of Kodak Verichrome Pan 122 Film on a black spool, with a red, yellow and green paper casing.
Kodak Canada Inc.
Kodakcolor II Color Negative Film C616
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item consists of a 8, 12, or 16 exposure roll of Daylight (ASA 80) Kodacolor II Color Negative Film C616 in original packaging. Develop before date is March 1977.
Kodak Canada Inc.
Lumetron photoelectric colorimeter
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
An early version of a spectrometer used to calculate the concentration of chemicals by the amount of absorption of light at certain wavelengths.
Kodak Canada Inc.
Kodak contact control guide, C-1
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item is a printed transparency, produced by Eastman Kodak Company in 1968, designed to assist in the production of contact reproductions of lines and halftone negatives or positives. In printed envelope with accompanying instructions.
Eastman Kodak Company
No. 2 Brownie Enlarging Camera
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item is a collapsible print making system for amateur use. Designed to concentrate daylight to make 5" x 7" prints from 2.25 x 3.25" negatives. Original packaging and users guide is included.
Eastman Kodak Company
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item is a small hand held camera with black plastic and metal casing. Winding knob on bottom left and metal latch for attaching a flash on top (no flash included). Around lens opening, "BULLET CAMERA" is printed. Designed in art deco style.
Eastman Kodak Company
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item is a black plastic disc camera with sliding flash which activates the the telephoto lens. Has a grey wrist strap. Front flap swings open to reveal shutter and lens. Battery door on front, takes two AA size batteries. "Kodak Tele Disc." "A disc camera by Eastman Kodak Company".
Eastman Kodak Company
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item is a small auto-exposure camera with a plastic black leatherette body and metal fittings. It features a Kodar f/8 41mm lens, central viewfinder, and a long rectangular flashcube with facility. It has a selenium meter-controlled automatic aperture system and was made for use with 126 cartridge film. Serial no. 841933.
Eastman Kodak Company
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item is a disc camera with a metal and black plastic body and a hinged black plastic panel covering the front of the camera that could be used as a table stand. It has a small eyelevel viewfinder, built in flash, f/2.8 12.5mm lens, shutter speeds of 1/100 and 1/200 sec., and wrist strap included. Used VR disc film.
Eastman Kodak Company
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item is a black and silver camera with Kodak Ektanar Lens. Fatures a built in flashgun for AG1 bulbs and tripod mount. Uses 126 film.
Eastman Kodak Company
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item is a motion picture camera with black plastic body. In original box (opened) with manual folded inside. Used Kodak Super 8 film cartridge and was powered by 4 AA batteries (removed). Comes with Kodak Zoom lens f1.9 (13-28mm). Large red bulb on front.
Eastman Kodak Company
Kodak DVC 300 Digital Video Camera
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item is a web camera with mount and USB cord for connecting to a computer. In original packaging.
Eastman Kodak Company
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item consists of a small metal tin containing a Kodak Portrait Attachment 3.
Kodak Canada Inc.
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item consists of a Cine-Kodak Bifocal Converter.
Kodak Canada Inc.
Kodak, Official imaging sponsor of the 1996 Olympic games, Atlantic 1996
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item is a collections of butterfly clutch lapel pins. Pins are a square shape with rounded corners and have a cloisonne type appearance. The left side features the Olympic logo on top of a blue background with the words "100 / Atlanta 1996". The right side is gold with the words "Kodak / Official Imaging Sponsor of the 1996 Olympic Games" in black. These Olympic Games were the 100th Anniversary of the first Summer Games in Greece held in 1896.
Kodak Canada Inc.
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item is a medium format studio camera. It resembles the Premo Sr., but features an extra long bellows that extends out the back of the camera. It is made of wood and polished laquered brass, and the body is covered with fine black leather. It is fitted with a Kodak Ball Bearing Shutter and a Kodak Anastigmat f7.7/170 mm lens.
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item is a basic, small-sized camera made of Bakelite and featuring a flip-up frame and viewfinder. A rotary shutter is operated by a lever under the miniscus lens. It made a picture size of 6 x 4 cm using 127 type film.
Eastman Kodak Company
The Kodak Photo CD press conference, New York City
Part of Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection
Item is a VHS recording of the live press announcement of the Kodak Photo CD System, which was held at the Marriot Marquis in New York City on August 25th, 1992. The event included an outline of the products involved in the system and was hosted by David J Mels (Senior Vice President and Director of Communications and Public Affairs) and Kay R. Whitmore (Chairman, President and Cheif Executive Officer).
Eastman Kodak Company
View of construction.
Item is a cabinet card portrait of man. Text below photograph reads, 'Elmer Chickering, 21 West St. Boston'. Text on back of card reads, 'The Royal Studio, Elmer Chickering Proprietor 21 West St. Boston.'
Royal Studio
Blue and green cardboard mailer has a die-cut opening revealing souvenir photographs of Mount Vernon, Va. The mailer is addressed to Miss Lenore Parkinson, c/o Auditor of Disbursements Office, Bell Telephone Co., Elgin Bldg., Toronto, Ont., Canada, Room 902. The mailer is U.S. stamped, and cancelled.
The Grogan Photo Service
Kodak Photolife lithium battery pack
Item is a Kodak Photolife 9 volt lithium battery pack unused in original package.
Munro, Allan
Polaroid close-up lens kit# 540
Kodak Anastigmat f-2.7 63 mm lens
Item is a lens for a Kodak motion picture camera.
Has a shoe bracket and cord fitting for attachment to most flash synchronized camera. Comes with box.
Eastman Kodak Company
Flash attachment for an instamatic 110 camera.
Acme-Lite Manufacturing Corporation
Item consists of a Kodak B-C Flasholder. It features a 22.5-volt battery-condenser system for dependable flash synchronization and can be used with most flash-synchronized cameras, such as the Brownie Six-20 models.
Image Arts
Item consists of One Pair Kodak Handy Reflectors ...And One Handy Measure for Picture Making at Night. Included in a yellow and green paper envelope with black text are 2 foldable reflecting cones, 2 metal rings, and ABC intruction cards.
Image Arts
Item is a developing tank, composed of black Bakelite. Sytem comes with original box and user guides.
Item is a clockwork timer that will switch an enlarger On and Off to a preset timefor exposure. A time scale allows settings form 0 to 60 seconds. One can lock a time to repeat it, if neccesary. Includes instruction manual
Target metal enlarging easel mask
Alden 74 35mm Bulk Film Daylight Loader
Yankee Clipper developing tank
Item is a black plastic, sealable tank with corresponding reel, used to develop roll film.
Windman Brothers, Los Angeles USA
Item consists of two vials in original cardboard boxes, each containing 15 grains of Kodak Gold Chloride.
Image Arts
A.B.CK. Dyes for producing color prints from Kodachorme film by Eastman wash-off relief process
Item is a cardboard box containing 3 small vails of powdered dyes (magenta, cyan and yellow) for use in the Eastman Kodak dye-transfer process known as the "Eastman Wash-off Relief" process. The process was mostly in use in the graphic arts and used Kodachrome film.
Polaroid b&w high contrast film with processing pack
Polaroid Corporation
Item is a wooden sterocard viewer, with a stereocard of the Grand Colonnade, Naples, Italy.
Item is a viewer made from Bakelite that allows the viewing of stereo transparencies. Stereo transparency included.
Item consists of a Kodak 500 Projector. It was the considered the most portable Kodak projector yet, weighing just over 4 kilograms and featuring a self-contained carrying case. This item has a Kodak Readymatic Changer system that could hold up to 36 slides, but the Kodak 500 Projector was also made with a metal automatic magazine changer that stored up to 30 slides, allowing purchasers to choose their preferred slide-handling system.
Image Arts
Kodak Brownie Movie Projector Model I
Item consists of a Kodak Brownie Movie Projector, the first model. The projector was manufactured from October 1952 to February 1955. It is for 8mm film, has an f/2 lens, and a max reel of 200 ft. It originally marketed for $62.50. It has a brown metal and plastic body with a removable protective cover that has an operation manual laminated inside.
Image Arts
Kodak Modular Video System MVS-5000 Audio-Video Recorder
Item is a Kodak Modular Video System with MVS 8 mm Audio-Video Recorder with remote control.
Munro, Allan
Part of Nicholas M. and Marilyn A. Graver Photographic Publications Collection
Kodaguide Snapshot and Flash / Eastman Kodak, Rochester, New York
Part of Nicholas M. and Marilyn A. Graver Photographic Publications Collection
Eastman Kodak Company
Part of Nicholas M. and Marilyn A. Graver Photographic Publications Collection
Item is a booklet produced by Eastman Kodak Co. for calculating daylight and flash exposures. Contains 2 movable wheels, one for flash photographs and one for snapshots.
Kodak indoor exposure guide for Kodak roll films & film packs and Mazda Photoflood Lamps
Part of Nicholas M. and Marilyn A. Graver Photographic Publications Collection
Item is a paper card with an exposure calculator dial, published by Eastman Kodak to calculate the exposure time for Kodak film while using flash lamps.