When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: 1950s folding cameras

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Mamiya Six - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamiya_Six

    The Mamiya Six, also known as the Mamiya-6, is a series of folding medium-format rangefinder cameras manufactured by Mamiya between 1940 and the late 1950s. The cameras captured twelve 6 cm × 6 cm images on 120 film rolls. Some later models could also take sixteen 4.5 cm × 6 cm images. The cameras were coupled rangefinders, but had a unique ...

  3. Kodak Brownie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kodak_Brownie

    The Brownie was a basic cardboard box camera with a simple convex-concave lens that took 2⁄4 -inch square pictures on No. 117 roll film. It was conceived and marketed for sales of Kodak roll films. Because of its simple controls and initial price of US$1 (equivalent to $37 in 2023) along with the low price of Kodak roll film and processing ...

  4. Kodak Retina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kodak_Retina

    Kodak Retina. Retina was the brand-name of a long-running series of German -built Kodak 35mm cameras, produced from 1934 until 1969. Kodak Retina cameras were manufactured in Stuttgart-Wangen by the Kodak AG Dr. Nagel Werk which Kodak had acquired in December 1931. The Retina line included a variety of folding and non-folding models, including ...

  5. Voigtländer Bessa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voigtländer_Bessa

    Voigtländer Bessa. Bessa is the best-known line of folding viewfinder and rangefinder cameras manufactured by Voigtländer, which was a dual-format camera that took 6×9 and 4.5×6 pictures on medium format rollfilm. The Bessa was introduced in 1929 and an improved version incorporating a coupled rangefinder was introduced as the Bessa ...

  6. Folding camera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folding_camera

    A folding camera is a camera type. Folding cameras fold into a compact and rugged package for storage. The lens and shutter are attached to a lens-board which is connected to the body of the camera by a light-tight folding bellows. When the camera is fully unfolded it provides the correct focus distance from the film.

  7. Rangefinder camera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rangefinder_camera

    The most popular design in the 1950s were folding designs like the Kodak Retina and the Zeiss Contessa. In the 1960s many fixed-lens 35 mm rangefinder cameras for the amateur market were produced by several manufacturers, mainly Japanese, including Canon, Fujica, Konica, Mamiya, Minolta, Olympus, Petri Camera, Ricoh, and Yashica. Distributors ...