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Nikon One Touch AF3 (1987)

Nikon One Touch AF3 (1987)

What is it? This is a Nikon One Touch AF3 auto focus 35mm point and shoot camera made by Nikon starting in 1987.  The AF3 was the third version of the original L35 from 1983 which was Nikon’s first compact auto focus camera.  The AF3 has a simpler 4 element lens…

November 20, 2016 June 4, 2025 Photography / Reviews  35mm / 8.0 / Japan / Nikon
Continue Reading"Nikon One Touch AF3 (1987)"
Fujica 35-ML (1958)

Fujica 35-ML (1958)

This is a Fujica 35-ML rangefinder camera made by Fuji Photo Film Co. starting in 1958.  Fuji would use the name “Fujica” on all of their film cameras until the late 1970s.  It was an amalgam of the words “Fuji” and “camera”.  The ML was otherwise identical to the Fujica 35-M released…

November 18, 2016 January 31, 2024 Photography / Reviews  12.0 / 35mm / Fujica / Japan
Continue Reading"Fujica 35-ML (1958)"
Yashica Lynx-14 (1965)

Yashica Lynx-14 (1965)

What is it? This is a Yashica Lynx-14 35mm rangefinder camera made in Japan starting in 1965.  The Lynx was Yashica’s top of the line 35mm rangefinder series in the 1960s.  The first two models, the Lynx 1000 and 5000 both had fast f/1.8 lenses with modern light meters.  Then…

November 17, 2016 January 31, 2024 Photography / Reviews  35mm / 4.0 / Japan / Yashica
Continue Reading"Yashica Lynx-14 (1965)"
Clarus MS-35 (1948)

Clarus MS-35 (1948)

This is a Clarus MS-35 camera made by the Clarus Camera Manufacturing Co. based out of Minneapolis, MN.  This was the first and only camera made by Clarus and was sold between the years of 1946 and 1952.  The Clarus MS-35 was an ambitious 35mm rangefinder that bore a striking…

November 16, 2016 January 31, 2024 Photography / Reviews  35mm / 9.0 / Clarus / USA
Continue Reading"Clarus MS-35 (1948)"
Certo Dollina II (1936)

Certo Dollina II (1936)

This is a Certo Dollina II rangefinder camera made in Dresden, Germany by Certo Camera Werk.  The Dollina II was first introduced in 1936, only a year after the Dollina I which did not have a rangefinder, making the Dollina series the second cameras ever made designed to use Kodak’s new…

November 14, 2016 January 31, 2024 Photography / Reviews  35mm / 8.0 / Certo / Germany
Continue Reading"Certo Dollina II (1936)"
The Dawn of the Cameras of the Dead

The Dawn of the Cameras of the Dead

When there’s no more room in hell, the dead will walk the Earth… This is a followup to an earlier post I spontaneously wrote back in August called “The Cameras of the Dead”.  In that article, I applied a tongue in cheek analogy to George Romero’s 1968 classic “The Night of…

October 31, 2016 October 18, 2018 Photography / Reviews  35mm / Dead / Kodak / Perfex / Polaroid / USA
Continue Reading"The Dawn of the Cameras of the Dead"
Voigtländer Rollfilm (1927)

Voigtländer Rollfilm (1927)

What is it? This is a Voigtländer Rollfilm folding camera that was made between the years of 1927 – 1931.  The Rollfilm was one of Voigtländer’s first attempts at a camera that used roll film.  I guess they didn’t think it was necessary to give it a unique sounding name, and just…

October 28, 2016 January 31, 2024 Photography / Reviews  120 / 8.0 / Germany / Voigtländer
Continue Reading"Voigtländer Rollfilm (1927)"
Yashica 44 (1958)

Yashica 44 (1958)

This is a Yashica 44 Twin Lens Reflex camera made by the Yashica Company, Ltd, in 1958.  The Yashica 44 is designed for 127 film unlike most other TLRs of the time which used either 120 or 620 film.  Using 127 film, this camera made images that were 4cm x 4cm,…

October 24, 2016 January 31, 2024 Photography / Reviews  11.0 / 127 / Japan / Yashica
Continue Reading"Yashica 44 (1958)"
Miranda D (1960)

Miranda D (1960)

This is a Miranda D 35mm Single Lens Reflex camera made in 1960 by Miranda Camera K.K.  Although made in Japan, around the time this model was current, most Miranda cameras were not sold in the Japanese domestic market.  This camera was most likely sold in the United States by…

October 23, 2016 January 31, 2024 Photography / Reviews  10.0 / 35mm / Japan / Miranda
Continue Reading"Miranda D (1960)"
Kodak No. 2 Brownie Model D (1914)

Kodak No. 2 Brownie Model D (1914)

What is it? This is a No. 2 Brownie Model D box camera, made by the Eastman-Kodak company around 1914.  The name “Brownie” has been used by Kodak on a huge variety of inexpensive cameras starting with the very first model in 1900, all the way to Bakelite bodied cameras…

October 22, 2016 January 31, 2024 Photography / Reviews  120 / 9.0 / Kodak / USA
Continue Reading"Kodak No. 2 Brownie Model D (1914)"
Kodak No. 1 Panoram-Kodak (1900 – 1926)

Kodak No. 1 Panoram-Kodak (1900 – 1926)

What is it? These are two different variants of the No. 1 Panoram- Kodak.  The model on the left is the Model D, and the one on the right is an earlier version, simply called the No. 1 Panoram-Kodak.  Both cameras were designed for 105 format roll film, and took…

October 21, 2016 January 31, 2024 Photography / Reviews  9.0 / Kodak / USA
Continue Reading"Kodak No. 1 Panoram-Kodak (1900 – 1926)"
The Cameras of the Dead

The Cameras of the Dead

…they’re coming to get you, Barbara… George Romero’s 1968 film, “The Night of the Living Dead” is a movie almost anyone with an interest in cinema is familiar with.  It doesn’t matter if you’re a fan of horror or not, most everyone has at least heard of this groundbreaking low-budget…

August 22, 2016 October 18, 2018 Photography / Reviews  120 / 35mm / Dead / KMZ / Kochmann / Kodak / Soviet / USA
Continue Reading"The Cameras of the Dead"

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