My Vintage Camera Collection Andrew Savino
Contents
No. 1A Pocket Kodak................................................2
Kodak Brownie Bullet..............................................36
Kodak Brownie Junior Six-16....................................4
Kodak Flash Fun.....................................................38
Kodak Baby Brownie Special....................................8
Kodak Brownie Starmite II.......................................40
Kodak Vigilant Six-16..............................................10
Petri 7s....................................................................44
Kodak Brownie Reflex.............................................12
Kodak Instamatic 154..............................................46
Kodak Brownie Flash Six-20...................................14
Kodak Instamatic 304..............................................48
Kodak Duaflex II......................................................16
Kodak Brownie Fiesta R4........................................50
Agfa Karat...............................................................18
Kodak Hawkeye Instamatic II..................................52
Brownie Hawkeye Flash Model...............................20
Minolta SR-T 101.....................................................54
Argus Seventy Five.................................................24
Polaroid OneStep Land Camera.............................56
Kodak Pony 135......................................................26
Kodak Tele Disc Camera.........................................60
Polaroid Model 80...................................................28
About.......................................................................62
Kodak Retina Reflex................................................30
References..............................................................63
Kodak Brownie Starflash.........................................34
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No. 1A Pocket Kodak 1926-1932
The Kodak No. 1A folding pocket camera was made from 1926 until 1932 by Eastman Kodak in Rochester, New York. This camera came in many models. This particular camera had a photo size of 2 ½ by 4 ¼ and used 116 film. The camera came with a 127mm f/6.3 Kodak Anastigmat uncoated 3 or 4-elements and had exposure speeds of 1/25 and 1/50. Additionally, the camera had a focus distance of 6 feet to infinity. The body came in leather and metal and had a black folding bellow. The camera originally cost around $20. I was drawn to this camera on eBay because of its age – it is the oldest in my collection.
Fun Fact: The 1A stands for “Autographic
Special” because the photographer was able to make notes on the film.
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Kodak Brownie Junior Six-16 1933-1942
The Kodak Junior Six-16 was a folding camera that used 616 film rolls. Kodak made this camera in Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The German model was made from 1935 to 1937. It had a round end and straight struts, a Kodak Anastigmat incorporated into its housing, and another optical finder placed near the shutter. The Junior Six-16 took 6 exposures and had a picture size of 2 ½ by 4 ¼ on a single roll of 616 film. The United Kingdom model was made from 1933 until 1940 and was practically identical to the German model, but it had two frame finders and a quick release bar at the front of the bed which released the self-folding bed. The U.S. model was produced from 1935 until 1937 and had mostly all the same features as the others. I acquired this camera on eBay and thought this particular camera was interesting because it is one of the earliest cameras in my collection.
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Fun Fact: George Eastman founded the
Eastman Kodak Company in the 1880s – but the word “Kodak” is a made-up name. Eastman liked the letter “K” and he wanted a name that would be short, easy to pronounce, and different from any that already existed.
“There are no rules for good photographs, there are only good photographs.”
- Ansel Adams
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Kodak Baby Brownie Special 1939-1954
The Kodak Baby Brownie Special is a solid body eyelevel roll film camera produced from September 1939 until 1954. This camera has a film size of 127mm and a picture size of 1 ⅝ x 2 ½. It had a rotary shutter and a meniscus lens. This camera was largely a replacement for the Kodak Baby Brownie, adding an optical viewfinder. The body was made in two halves out of molded plastic and is held together by a sliding latch on either side for film loading. The front panel carried the shutter, lens and film transport; the back box just the viewfinder. The normal Baby Brownie was even more basic with flip-up metal brackets instead of the Special’s optical viewfinder and a shutter release lever very similar to the one seen on the Six-20 Bull’s Eye.
Fun Fact: The camera originally cost $1.25 which is equivalent to around $20 today.
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Kodak Vigilant Six-16 1939-1948
The Kodak Vigilant Six-16 is a folding, self-erecting camera made in the USA and Canada from 1939 to 1948. This camera had a photo size of 2 ¼ by 3 ¼ on 620 film. It was similar to the Kodak Vigilant Six-20 but had a simpler lens and shutter. There was also a larger model, the Vigilant Junior Six-16. This camera has a simple fixed focus Kodet meniscus lens in a Dakon shutter. The camera also had the option of a better 3 element Bimat lens with a fully adjustable aperture of f/11 to f/32 iris. It had a Dakon shutter with time, bulb, and 1/25 sec plus 1/50 sec exposure settings. This camera came with a black folding bellow and weighed 1.6 pounds. The camera has a single action type shutter with I, T and B settings. A remote cable release socket is provided. The five-blade iris type aperture is variable between f/12.5 and f/32. It has both fold down eye level frame viewfinder and a waist level brilliant viewfinder. Two tripod sockets for both portrait and landscape orientation are available. 10
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Kodak Brownie Reflex 1940-1952
The Kodak Reflex is a box roll film camera produced from May 1940 until May 1952. This camera had a film size of 127mm and a picture size of 1 ⅝ by 1 ⅝. It was manufactured in both the United States and the United Kingdom. This camera has a "twinlens reflex" pattern with a large, brilliant finder with folding hood. The non-synchronized model was produced from 1940 until August 1941. The Synchro Model, with a 2-pin flash system, was produced from September 1941 until May 1952. The camera came with a fixed focus meniscus lens that focused from 5 feet to infinity and had a reflex viewfinder. Additionally, it had a fixed aperture and a shutter speed of 1/30 sec and came with a bulb mode.
Fun Fact: Kodak produced millions of this camera model and sold them for $5.25 each.
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Kodak Brownie Flash Six-20 1946-1955
The Kodak Brownie Flash Six-20 is a solid body eyelevel roll film camera produced from July 1946 until January 1955. This camera had a film size of 620 and a picture size of 2 ¼ by 3 ¼. The Brownie Flash Six-20 originally cost $6. This camera came with a built in closeup lens and was a popular camera because of its "indestructibility". It came with a metal box body and had an optical direct vision finder. I acquired this camera on eBay and was drawn to this camera because of its unique shape and because it had the original flash. I also found an original flash bulb to complete it.
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Kodak Duaflex II 1947-1950
The Kodak Duaflex II is a 620 roll film camera made in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom. The original Duaflex was first produced from December 1947 until 1950 in the United States. There were 4 different versions of this camera made up until March 1960 in the US when the camera was discontinued. This camera could produce a 6x6 inch photo and had a focal range of 3.5’ to infinity. Also, the viewfinder was a mirror reflector and had shutter speeds of about 1/30 plus ‘b’ and weighed 1 lb, 1.4 oz.
flash used No. 5 and No. 25 bulbs but could only be used on the B camera setting.
The body was made of Bakelite with metal fittings and trims. The camera could be purchased with a 75mm f/15 fixed focus or with a 72mm f/8 kodar triplet lens. The shutter had two speeds: “I” and “B” which could be synched to a Kodalite Flash holder. The first two models (the Duaflex and the Duaflex II) came with a dedicated flash holder which is shown on this particular camera, while the later models had an adapter so a flash could be added if desired. The
“A good snapshot keeps a moment from running away.”
Fun Fact: A special feature of the Duaflex was a
feature that prevented double exposures by having to turn a knob before the shutter could be activated again.
- Eudora Welty
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Agfa Karat IV 1950-1956
The Agfa Karat is a 35mm film camera produced by Agfa in Germany. It was imported into the United States as the Ansco Karamat. Agfa is considered one of the best black-and-white developers of all time and is also known for its photographic paper. Agfa produced many different models with this particular one being made from 1950 to 1956 which came with Solinar 50/2.8, Solagon 50/2.0, Xenon 50/2.0, and Apotar 50/3.5. This camera had an aperture of 2.0 to 16 and had an optical viewfinder with a superimposed rangefinder.
Fun Fact: This camera is very special to me
because it was purchased by my grandfather while he was stationed in Germany in the 1950s. I like this camera because it’s one of the only German cameras that I have in my collection and because of the personal connection.
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Kodak Brownie Hawkeye Flash Model 1949-1961
The Brownie Hawkeye camera was made between May 1949 and November 1951 by Eastman Kodak and originally sold for $5.50 for the standard model and $7 for the flash model. This camera has a molded Bakelite body and uses a brilliant viewfinder. It had a film size of 620 and a picture size of 2 ¼ by 2 ¼. Additionally, the Hawkeye had a rotary shutter and a Meniscus lens. The Brownie Hawkeye Flash Model is capable of accepting a wide range of Kodak pin and screw flash attachments. This same camera was also manufactured in France as Brownie Flash Camera.
for contact prints or can be enlarged for sharp prints. This camera was designed by Arthur H. Crapsey, the designer of many other Kodak cameras.
The Brownie Hawkeye Flash Model Camera is recognized as one of the most popular Brownie cameras. It is easy to use and was popular with film photographers because it's cheap to buy, it comes apart easily for lens and viewfinder cleaning, and most will accept 120 film without respooling it onto 620 spools, making it even easier to shoot with. The big square negatives it produces are large enough My Vintage Camera Collection
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Argus 75 1949-1964
The Argoflex Seventy-Five and Argus SeventyFive were two name variants of the same model of pseudo TLR, produced by Argus in the USA, beginning in 1949. The main body was molded from plastic, while the film door is a painted metal casting. The front panel and viewfinder hood are in a contrasting satin-finish metal. A cloth neck strap is permanently attached to the top of the body. Images were 6x6cm on 620 film. It featured a doubleexposure prevention, as well as a reminder when the film has been wound. A red-painted shutter blade is visible through the lens only after the shutter is cocked. The lens was branded as a 75mm Lumar and was a single meniscus element in front of a fixed aperture of approximately f/11. The shutter runs around 1/50 of a second, with a small slider next to the shutter release selecting between "Inst" (instant) and "Time" (actually bulb). A standard Argus Seventy-Five kit would typically have included a leather protective case, flashbulb 24
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holder (mounted with two pins 1-3/16" apart), and a slip-on accessory "portrait" lens to focus in the 3-to-4-foot range. The final version of the SeventyFive in production until 1964 had slightly redesigned graphics, becoming the Argus 75. Argus also offered two higher-specification variations on the SeventyFive, adding a focusable lens: the Argus 40 and the Argus Super Seventy-Five.
“There are always two people in every picture: the photographer and the viewer.”
- Ansel Adams
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Kodak Pony 135 1950-1954
The Kodak Pony is a 35mm film camera produced from 1950 until 1954. Cameras are a series of Bakelite bodied small format cameras designed by Arthur H Crapsey. They fit into the Kodak lineup between the roll film Brownie and the 35mm Signet series. Like the Brownie series cameras, the Pony cameras lack rangefinders and have simple viewfinders. Like the Signet series, they feature Kodak's better glass lenses, the 3 element Anastons and the four element Anastars (all with front element focusing). Also like the Signets, they have variable speed (except for the Pony II), manually cocked Kodak synchronized shutters. A shutter release/ film advance interlock (with bypass switch) prevents double exposures.
Fun Fact: The Kodak Pony 135 originally sold for $34.75 which is equivalent to approximately $268 today.
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Polaroid Model 80 1954-1961
The Polaroid Model 80 (Highlander) was made by Polaroid Corporation from 1954 until 1957 and was the first Land camera to be smaller sized than the other current models. The camera body is steel with brown painted crackle finish and self-erecting bellows design. It has a rigid viewfinder on top of the camera and the exposure is set by Light Value scale ("Polaroid numbers"). The shutter is a 2-speed everset rotary-leaf design (1/25 and 1/100 plus Bulb) coupled with a 100mm ~ f/8.8, 3-element glass lens. The flash is M-sync via Polaroid "hot shoe". The Polaroid Model 80A (Highlander) was made from 1957 to 1959 and is the second in the Model 80 series of cameras. Very similar to the Model 80 except that the exposure is now set by Polaroid's standard EV (Exposure Value) scale system. Instead of using traditional f/ stop names (f/8, f/11, f/16, etc.) each f/ stop opening was assigned a number. Therefore, the shutter is marked using the EV system. 28
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The Polaroid Model 80B (Highlander) was made from 1959 until 1961 and is the third and final version in the Model 80 series of cameras and it retains all the other advancements and changes of the first two models except it has a different cutter bar and film release switch.
“Your first 10,000 photographs are your worst.”
- Henri Cartier-Bresson
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Kodak Retina Reflex 1957-1958
The Kodak Type 025 Retina Reflex is an SLR camera made between Spring 1957 and October 1958. Like many German 35mm SLR cameras, it works with a leaf shutter instead of a focal plane shutter. It was named Type 025 Retina Reflex since it inherited several features from the Retina rangefinder cameras, like the Retina IIIc - the film advance and exposure counting system, the film channel, the selenium meter, and the focusing mechanics of the lenses. The early Retina Reflex models are basically fixedlens cameras with interchangeable front elements. Later models had fully interchangeable lenses. All the Retina Reflex cameras are complex and heavy instruments. Approximately 65,000 Retina Reflex cameras were made, originally selling for $215.
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Kodak Brownie Starflash 1957-1965
The Brownie Starflash is a solid body eyelevel roll film camera made by Eastman Kodak in the United States and in France. The camera was introduced in March 1957 and was discontinued in June 1965. This camera had a film size of 127mm and a picture size of 1 ⅝ by 1 ⅝ inches. The camera featured a Dakon lens and a rotary shutter and originally cost $8.50. There were many variations made of this camera with different colored bodies which included: black, red, white, blue, and a Coca-Cola motif which was for promotional use. The Brownie Starflash has a molded plastic body, optical direct vision finder, and built-in flash gun for capless bulbs. This camera was also supplied in an outfit for close-up photography as the Kodak Startech Camera. The built-in flashgun and small size made this camera extremely portable and easy to use. This camera was designed by Arthur H. Crapsey, the designer of many Kodak cameras.
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Kodak Brownie Bullet 1957-1964
The Brownie Bullet was made by Eastman Kodak in both the United States and in Brazil from September 1957 until 1964. The Brownie Bullet was a promotional, or "premium", exact copy of the Brownie Holiday camera. These promotional/ premium cameras were not normal retail items, but were used for promotional purposes by thirdparty companies to encourage customers to take advantage of their goods or services. This camera features a Dakon lens and a rotary shutter system and uses 127 film. It has a molded black plastic body with white, cream, or grayish controls. It has a plastic lens and viewfinder. The shutter is operated by a white plastic push button on the top. The film winder is also in white plastic. The body has two halves which are held together by a sliding latch on either side.
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Kodak Flash Fun 1961-1967
The Kodak Flash Fun camera was produced from 1961 until 1967. This is a 127 film Kodak camera in an unusual shape. The Flashfun Hawkeye camera was a promotional item that was never released for retail sale. The body is made from molded plastic in shades of beige and salmon pink. It is tall and thin, with a flash at the top, an offset viewfinder, and a plastic lens below the flash. The camera takes AG1B flash bulbs.
“There are always two people in every picture: the photographer and the viewer.”
- Ansel Adams
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Kodak Brownie Starmite II 1962-1967
The Starmite II was made by Eastman Kodak from November 1962 until August 1967. The Starmite camera has a molded plastic body and optical direct vision finder. It features a built-in flash gun with rectangular reflector for AG1 bulbs. This camera had a picture size of 1 ⅝ by 1 ⅝ inches and used a fixed focus f/11 lens. A version was assembled in France under the name Brownie Starluxe II camera. The Kodak Brownie Star simple plastic cameras were very popular. Over 10 million Star series cameras were made. All were based on a similar layout with each model having various combinations of different viewfinder and flash arrangements, some built-in, some external, some with no flash facility. Some models were available in different colors as well. The "star" name was applied to 127 film cameras, but there were similar models made using 620 film. This camera originally sold for $12.
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Petri 7s 1963-1973
The Petri 7s was introduced by Petri, a Japanese camera company, in 1963 as a variant of the Petri 7 which was introduced in 1961. The Petri ended production in 1973. It took 35mm film, had a coupled rangefinder, and an around-the-lens selenium cell light meter. The 7s is very advanced compared to its predecessor. It has ATL (around the lens) selenium metering with a match-needle visible both in the viewfinder as well as the top of the camera. The 7s was available with either a 45mm amber coated f/1.8 or f/2.8 lens and came with a mechanical MVE leaf shutter system which had speeds up to 1/500. Petri was never well known to the general public. They produced cameras from the inception of the company in 1907 up until its bankruptcy in 1977, with a few produced until the early 1980s.
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Kodak Instamatic 154 1965-1969
The Kodak 154 was made from 1965 until 1969. This model is very similar to the Instamatic 104, but with the addition of a clockwork motor wind. The lens is an f/11, 43mm and the shutter speeds are 1/40 of a second to 1/90 of a second. The clockwork ensures the advance of film and the rotation of flashcube after each release. It also makes it possible to bring film to frame 1 when the cartridge is in place and to entirely roll up film after the last snapshot. A spring makes it possible to advance 12 frames. The camera uses 126 cartridge film to produce a picture size of 1 by 1 inch. The original list price was $30.
“A good photograph is knowing where to stand.”
- Ansel Adams
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Kodak Instamatic 304 1965-1969
The Kodak Instamatic 304 was made from 1965 until 1969 and is considered one of the more technologically advanced cameras in Kodak’s Instamatic line with an automatic aperture system controlled by a selenium meter (seen on the front next to the viewfinder). It has a relatively simple Kodar 41mm f/8 lens with two shutter speeds: 1/90 and 1/40 for flash photography. This camera used 126mm film. This Instamatic is also one of the first to use flash cubes, plastic rotating cubes that have four single-use zirconium foil flash bulbs good for four exposures before you eject it by pressing a button under the light meter. Like other Instamatics, the film advance lever is recessed (into the side, in this case) while the rocker switch style shutter button sits on top of the camera. The Kodak Instamatic 304 retailed for $44.50.
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Kodak Brownie Fiesta R4 1966-1970
The Brownie Fiesta R4 was produced from March 1966 until March 1970 by Eastman Kodak. This camera has a molded plastic body with a clear plastic front over the lens plate. This simple camera has an optical direct vision finder and came with a meniscus f/11 lens. Additionally, this camera had a picture size of 1 ⅝ by 1 ⅝. The Brownie Fiesta R4 had the addition of a flashcube socket which was considered an improvement over the single bulb flash attachment available with all of the other Fiesta models. It originally sold for $9.
“A camera is a SAVE button for the mind’s eye.”
- Roger Kingston
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Kodak Hawkeye Instamatic II 1969-1975
The Kodak Hawkeye Instamatic II camera was produced from 1969 to 1975. The Hawkeye II is a restyled version of the Kodak Instamatic 44 that was being produced around the same time, the biggest difference being that the Instamatic 44 had an original list price of $9.95, the most inexpensive of all cameras in the Kodak Instamatic line.
Fun Fact: The Hawkeye II was never sold
at retail stores. It was produced to be used in promotions for other products – including Scott Paper Towels. The idea was to give away the camera, while creating a continuing demand for Kodak film.
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Minolta SR-T 101 1966-1976
The Minolta SR-T 101 is a 35mm manual focus SLR camera that was introduced in 1966 by Minolta Camera Co. for the more demanding amateur and semi-professional photographers. The SR-T 101 stayed in production for ten years with only minor changes. The design is based on the Minolta SR-7 model V camera of 1962, with several different features. The most significant one is the full aperture metering facility, allowing the exposure to be set accurately without stopping down. The top cover and the base plate are finished in black enamel while most metal parts are black chromed, but the wind lever is black anodized. The parts still chromed include the shutter-release button, the mirror lock-up knob, the depth-of-field preview button, and the lensrelease button.
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Polaroid SX-70 Land Camera 1972-1981
The Polaroid SX-70 Land Camera is a folding SLR Land camera that was made from 1972 to 1981. Pictures from the SX-70 ejected automatically and developed quickly (within 10 minutes). In April of 1972, Polaroid founder Edwin H. Land announced the SX-70 at a company annual meeting. On stage, he took out a folded SX-70 from his suit coat pocket and in ten seconds took five pictures, which was impossible with previous Land Cameras. The company first sold the SX-70 in Miami, Florida in late 1972, and began selling it nationally in Fall 1973 for $180 for the camera and $6.90 for each film pack of ten pictures which amounts to $1,114 and $43 today. Polaroid sold 700,000 by mid-1974. Though expensive, the SX-70 Land Camera was popular in the 1970s and Polaroid is still selling versions of the SX-70. There were a variety of models beginning in 1972, though all shared the same basic design. The first model had a plain focusing screen (the user was 56
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expected to be able to see the difference between in- and out of focus) because Dr. Land wanted to encourage photographers to think they were looking at the subject, rather than through a viewfinder. When many users complained that focusing was difficult, especially in dim light, a split-image rangefinder prism was added.
Fun Fact: In 1973 and 1974, the Skylab 3 and
4 astronauts used an SX-70 to photograph a video display screen to compare the Sun's features from one orbit to the next. Photographers such as Ansel Adams, Andy Warhol, Helmut Newton, and Walker Evans used the SX-70.
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Kodak Tele Disc 1982-1990
The Kodak Tele Disc was introduced in 1982. Kodak thought that its disc film would be revolutionary. Instead of using roll film or awkwardly shaped cartridges, consumers could now load their cameras by inserting a thin plastic disc into the back. Pressing the red-striped shutter button exposes an 8x11mm frame on the disk, which then rotates 24° for the next photo, for a total of 15 frames per cartridge. The Tele Disc has two lens choices: a normal 12.5mm f/4 and 22mm f/5.6 telephoto. Extending the flash rotates the telephoto lens into place and also swaps in a new viewfinder. Despite the easy loading procedure, disc film was a commercial failure.
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About
I am a senior at George Mason University’s College of Visual and Performing Arts, pursuing a Bachelor of Fine Arts with a concentration in Graphic Design. I've always had an artist’s eye and continue to create quality work using my photography as an influence throughout my college experience. I'm known for being both a perfectionist and having a 62
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good work ethic in anything I'm passionate about, especially when it comes to design and fine art. As a result, my photographs have been juried into MidAtlantic Photo Visions and the Joseph Miller Abstract Photography Exhibits, and a few of my drawings have been published in George Mason’s Volition magazine. I earned an Associate Degree at Northern Virginia Community College before I transferred to George Mason’s School of Art. Upon graduation, I am looking forward to a long career in Graphic Design. This book combines my passion for photography and my collection of 25 vintage cameras that were acquired from family members, neighbors, yard sales, barn sales, and eBay. My goal was to create a catalogue of my camera collection that is both educational and well-designed.
References
Sourced Photos • https://www.camerhack.it/product/fak-616-film-adapter-from120-to-616/ • https://www.lomography.com/cameras/3337927-kodakbrownie-flash/photos • https://www.lomography.com/cameras/3317902-kodakbrownie-starflash/photos/21244406?order=popular • https://www.lomography.com/cameras/3332228-kodakhawkeye-flashfun/photos/12847944?order=popular • https://www.lomography.com/cameras/3319839-kodakbrownie-starmite-ii/photos/12155375?order=popular • https://www.brucevarner.com/ShootingTheHawkeye.html • https://www.lomography.com/cameras/3321376-kodakinstamatic/photos/20624744?order=popular • https://www.lomography.com/cameras/3321376-kodakinstamatic/photos/20624740?order=popular • https://www.lomography.com/homes/meredithjm/ albums/2184135-kodak-brownie-fiesta-r4-camera-withkodak-verichome-pan-127mm-film-exp-1970-shot-inoctober-2018/23031052 Advertisements • https://www.amazon.com/1925-Kodak-No-Pocket-Christmas/ dp/B01N0PVQCR • https://www.vintageadbrowser.com/search?q=kodak&page=79
• • • • • • • • • •
https://stinsoncamera.wordpress.com/kodak-brownie-reflexsynchro/ https://www.bonanza.com/listings/Z3763-MachineCamera-Agfa-Karat-Advertising-D-Epoca-1939Advertising/1208626577/ https://www.atticpaper.com/proddetail.php?prod=1955-kodakpony-135-camera-ad&cat=7 https://flashbak.com/smile-and-say-sleaze-sex-sells-invintage-camera-advertising-385535/1965-camera-advert/ https://www.flickr.com/photos/ casualcameracollector/5065558622 https://phsc.ca/camera/cough-cough/ https://andrewkaiserphotography.com/blog/minolta-srt-101camera-advertisement https://www.saturdayeveningpost.com/2017/09/vintage-adskodak-cameras-1901-1965/ https://collections.museumsvictoria.com.au/items/2124679 https://clickamericana.com/media/photography/whathappened-to-kodak-disc-camera-debuted-in-1982
Websites • https://www.brownie-camera.com/ • https://camerapedia.fandom.com/ • https://photographyspark.com/best-inspirational-famousphotography-quotes/ My Vintage Camera Collection
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My Vintage Camera Collection
My Vintage Camera Collection Andrew Savino
This book combines my passion for photography and my collection of 25 vintage cameras that were acquired from family members, neighbors, yard sales, barn sales, and eBay. My goal was to create a catalogue of my camera collection that is both educational and well-designed.