Camera

"There is nothing worse than a sharp image of a fuzzy concept.” Ansel Adams

Skina SK-222 35mm film camera

This is film camera Skina SK-222, Manufacturer Kaltec Corp. Japan, 1990. The shutter of this...

This is film camera Skina SK-222, Manufacturer Kaltec Corp. Japan, 1990. The shutter of this camera is 1 125. Focusing is carried out freely, and the focusing distance starts from 1.6 m. The viewfinder is installed as usual. Shooting modes only - Auto. 35mm film - (ISO) 100-400. Also, this model of the camera provides for automatic film advance. The camera is equipped with autoflash fill. Power - 2xAA batteries.

SAMSUNG FF-222

This is a film Camera made by Samsung. Format 24?36 mm 35mm film, Camera + original strap + Case,...

This is a film Camera made by Samsung. Format 24?36 mm 35mm film, Camera + original strap + Case, Battery. The manufactured year 1969.

Hitachi VM-200A VHS Camera (PROP)

A camcorder is a self-contained portable electronic device with video and recording as its...

A camcorder is a self-contained portable electronic device with video and recording as its primary function. It is typically equipped with an articulating screen mounted on the left side, a belt to facilitate holding on the right side, hot-swappable battery facing towards the user, hot-swappable recording media, and an internally contained quiet optical zoom lens. The earliest camcorders were tape-based, recording analog signals onto videotape cassettes. In 2006, digital recording became the norm, with tape replaced by storage media such as mini-HD, microDVD, internal flash memory and SD cards.[1] More recent devices capable of recording video are camera phones and digital cameras primarily intended for still pictures, whereas dedicated camcorders are often equipped with more functions and interfaces than more common cameras, such as an internal optical zoom lens that is able to operate silently with no throttled speed, whereas cameras with protracting zoom lenses commonly throttle operation speed during video recording to minimize acoustic disturbance. Additionally, dedicated units are able to operate solely on external power with no battery inserted. Height 10 Inches Width 7.25 Inches Depth 15.1 Inches

Zenit-122 with MC Helios

This is a vintage camera Zenit-122 35mm film vintage Soviet SLR camera Comes with MC HELIOS-44m-4...

This is a vintage camera Zenit-122 35mm film vintage Soviet SLR camera Comes with MC HELIOS-44m-4 58mm f 2.0 lens Fully manual control + built-in meter Made in USSR comes with a soft nylon case and front lens cap. In the Russian Zenit series of SLRs, the Zenit 12 is a slightly updated version of the Zenit TTL, made by KMZ between 1983 and 1994[1]. Improvements included a hot shoe, brighter viewfinder, and LED metering in later models. Zenit-122 appears to be just a cosmetic update of the Zenit-12 in a polycarbonate body.

Polavision Land Camera Movie Cine Camera

This is a vintage Polavision phototape cassette requires Polaroid Polavision Player for...

This is a vintage Polavision phototape cassette requires Polaroid Polavision Player for development and viewing you could watch your film 90 seconds after shooting. Development process automatically occurs when phototape cassette is inserted into Polaroid Polavision Player the first time. The phototape cassette contanins the developing agent. All polavision phototape cassettes have the following characteristics in common film width (8 mm), film length (38.5 feet), frame size (4.2 x 5.7 mm), frames per cassette (2800 frames) and packaged in the sealed cassette. Filming time 2 30 at 18 fps Specification Lens Polaroid Zoom f 1,8 12,5-25 mm Zooming ratio 2x Focusing fixed Zooming manual Viewfinder single-lens reflex with adjustable eyepiece Viewfinder information low light warning signal, film-end sign Exposure auto exposure control not TTL EE, CdS photocell Aperture range f 1.8 to f 22 Film speed auto for 25 40 ASA only (daylight tungsten) Filming speed 18 fps Remote control socket no Cable release socket no Movie light socket socket for special movie light attachment (Polaroid TwiLight) Film counter yes Handle fixed, chambers for penlit batteries Battery checker yes Film drive motor DC micromotor Battery 4 x AA This vintage polarvision cine camera is ideal for beginners, amateurs and professionals. It’ll produce high quality authentic vintage videos with a real nostalgic and quirky look. It’s in excellent condition and is ready to produce another lifetime of fantastic videos.

HITACHI COLOUR VIDEO CAMERA VK-C600

This is a vintage Hitachi Colour camera VK-C600. Early vintage video camera and recorder. Been in...

This is a vintage Hitachi Colour camera VK-C600. Early vintage video camera and recorder. Been in a loft for the last 30 years.

Polaroid Mini Portrait

This is vintage Polaroid Mini Portrait is a very unusual instant camera from a US company. The...

This is vintage Polaroid Mini Portrait is a very unusual instant camera from a US company. The first thing you notice about the camera is the four lenses. Multiple lenses on a camera are quite unusual these days, especially four times the same focal length, except on smartphones. The reason for the four lenses was the application area of the Polaroid Mini Portrait. The name already gives a clue, the camera was developed for passport photography. In the 70s, when the camera was introduced, taking passport photos was quite complex, in times of digital photography quite difficult to imagine. Although the camera is designed for professional photographers, the functions are very clear and the camera is easy to use. The Polaroid Mini Portrait works completely mechanically, no batteries are needed to take pictures. Exposure time and aperture are set by sliders on the side of the camera. There are three values to choose from. Depending on the selected aperture, the focus range of the lenses changes. The focus cannot be changed. To get sharp pictures, the camera has a built-in tape measure to measure the distance to the subject. A flash unit or flash unit can be connected via the PC flash socket. A cold-shoe for mounting is located on the upper side. Before pressing the green shutter release button or a cable release button, the camera shutter must be cocked with a slider on the upper side. Then it releases and exposes the instant film. As the Polaroid camera is a device for professional users, it was built very solidly. The housing of the camera, which is built in Japan, is not only very large but also completely made of metal and thus weighs a lot. In order to avoid blurred pictures and to bring consistency to the images, there is a thread for a tripod. Specs Brand Polaroid Name Polaroid Mini Portrait Art Instant camera Type of Film Typ 100 Focal length 125 mm Maximum aperture f 8 Focus Fixed Shutter speeds 1 125 s, 1 60 s, Bulb Flash Flash connection PC-Flash

Polaroid Colour Swinger

The Polaroid Swinger was a popular Land Camera produced by the Polaroid Corporation between...

The Polaroid Swinger was a popular Land Camera produced by the Polaroid Corporation between July 1965 and 1970. At 19.95 (equivalent to US 172 in 2021) and weighing only 21 ounces,[1] it was the first truly inexpensive instant camera, a fact that helped fuel its enormous popularity and made it one of the top-selling cameras of all time. The Swinger was especially successful in the youth market due to its low price, stylish appearance, catchy Meet the Swinger jingle, as well as getting the camera into drugstores. In fact, it was so successful that it became Polaroid s best-selling product at the time and increased its share in the new camera market.[2] History The camera was designed by Henry Dreyfuss.[3] One source for the name claims that when copywriter Phyllis Robinson of Doyle Dane Birnbach watched Edwin H. Land walk into her office swinging the camera from his wrist, she decided on the name Swinger .[4] The Swinger featured an extinction exposure meter tied to the aperture which displayed the word YES in a window below the viewfinder when the exposure was set correctly. Earlier models also displayed the word NO when not properly adjusted, while later units used only the YES indicator.[5] The Swinger also included a built-in flashgun for AG-1 flashbulb and a single element lens. The Swinger used Polaroid s 20-Series roll film, which was the first Polaroid roll film to develop outside the camera. The Swinger only used black and white film that kept its price low originally at 1.99 (equivalent to US 16.40 in 2020), but each roll produced small 2½ × 3¼ wallet size prints that were little more than half the 3 1 4 x 4 1 4 size of 40-Series Land Picture Rolls.[6][7] By 1970, sales went down because young people did not like the quality of the photos, and those who did buy the camera used two rolls of film on average.[8] Variants included the Model M-15 Swinger Sentinel (the Swinger II in non-US markets), which was a cheaper Swinger without the built-in flash, and the Model 3000 Big Swinger , which used 100-Series pack film instead of the old-style picture rolls. The Swinger name was also used on several international-market Polaroid cameras in the 1960s and 1970s. Specifications Polatriplet (plastic) lens with manual front-element focus from 1m to infinity. (Not coupled to viewfinder. Focus distance must be estimated.) Exposure adjustment dial. Neck strap. Cold-clip with basic instructions. Film type Peel-apart 80-Series Land Pack Films (3¼ x 3? , image 2¾ x 2? ) such as Polaroid 87, 88, Viva (all discontinued), or 100 series (such as Fujifilm FP-100C and FP-3000BW) Accepts flashcubes such as Phillips PFC 4. Shutter requires two standard 1.5V AA batteries.

Panasonic Recording Mini Cassette Recording RQ-L309

The Mini-Cassette, often written minicassette, is a magnetic tape audio cassette format...

The Mini-Cassette, often written minicassette, is a magnetic tape audio cassette format introduced by Philips in 1967. It is used primarily in dictation machines and was also employed as data storage for the Philips P2000 home computer. As of August 2021, Phillips still produces mini-cassette players along with new mini-cassette tapes. Design Unlike the Compact Cassette, also designed by Philips, and the later Microcassette, introduced by Olympus, the Mini-Cassette does not use a capstan drive system instead, the tape is propelled past the tape head by the reels.[4] This is mechanically simple and allows the cassette to be made smaller and easier to use, but produces a system unsuited to any task other than voice recording, as the tape speed is not constant (averaging 2.4 cm s) and prone to wow and flutter. However, the lack of a capstan and a pinch roller drive means that the tape is well-suited to being repeatedly shuttled forward and backward short distances as compared to microcassettes, leading to the Mini-Cassette s use in the first generations of telephone answering machines, and continuing use in the niche markets of dictation and transcription, where fidelity is not critical, but robustness of storage is, and where analog media remained in use long after digital media had been introduced.[5] A Sony Mini-Cassette dictation recorder In 1980, Philips released several recorder models (MDCR220, LDB4401, LDB4051, etc.) that encoded and read digital audio on standard mini-cassettes.[6][7] A computer model (the Philips P2000) also used the mini-cassette as a digital medium and provided automatic management of the drive, including search, space and directory management, fast-forward and rewind.

Sony Video 8 Handycam 6x Hi-Fi Stereo

Handycam is a Sony brand used to market its camcorder range. It was launched in 1985 as the name...

Handycam is a Sony brand used to market its camcorder range. It was launched in 1985 as the name of the first Video8 camcorder, replacing Sony s previous line of Betamax-based models, and the name was intended to emphasize the handy palm size nature of the camera, made possible by the new miniaturized tape format. This was in marked contrast to the larger, shoulder-mounted cameras available before the creation of Video8, and competing smaller formats such as VHS-C. Sony has continued to produce Handycams [1] in a variety of guises ever since, developing the Video8 format to produce Hi8 (equivalent to S-VHS quality) and later Digital8, using the same basic format to record digital video. The Handycam label continues to be applied as recording formats evolve.

Kodak EK100 Instant Camera

The Colorburst 100 was an instant picture camera introduced by Kodak in 1978 - costing 45. It...

The Colorburst 100 was an instant picture camera introduced by Kodak in 1978 - costing 45. It was also known as the Kodak EK100, a nearly identical model but has meter markings surrounding the lens along with feet markings. It was made in the USA and Canada, until 1980. Its design scheme is similar to many of Kodak s cameras that use 126 film. Exposure and focus control is with sliders on the face of the camera. Sliding the focus control rotates the lens indicator to the corresponding distance markers. The viewfinder uses an unusual circular spot system to aid in focusing head shots. It used PR10 (PR144) film. Flash was provided via a Flipflash socket on top of the camera. Kodak has not made any film for their instant cameras for about 30 years, due to a legal dispute with Polaroid. However Fujifilm do make an instant film that works with this camera - Fujifilm FI-800GT can be easily modified to work with the camera. Unlike Polaroids integral film packs, Kodak s did not contain a battery, along with conventional batteries, the use of a flat J sized 4LR61 batteries were also common in the cameras. This decision was made because it would cost less per pack and because Polaroid had a long history of technical problems with batteries in film packs which led to them manufacturing their own. Upon introduction of Kodak instant products, Polaroid filed suit against Kodak in 1976 for patent infringement. The case dragged on for years. Kodak lost the dispute, after the ruling in 1985, Kodak announced the discontinuation of their instant photo products.

Nikon F55 3174814

This is Nikon F55, a film camera made of Thailand.

This is Nikon F55, a film camera made of Thailand.

Kodak KE60 Easy Load 35mm Camera 0303876

This is a vintage film camera,

This is a vintage film camera,

Kodak Easyshare C813 KCGHR83057265

The Easyshare C813 is a discontinued digital camera made by Kodak. It features an 8.2-megapixel...

The Easyshare C813 is a discontinued digital camera made by Kodak. It features an 8.2-megapixel camera with 3× optical zoom a 2.4-inch colour LCD display digital image stabilization high ISO setting (up to 1250) video capture 16 scene modes and three colour modes on-camera picture enhancement and editing tools 16 MB on-camera storage, expandable with an SD card. The manufacturer recommends 2 GB SDHC and claims 16 GB is the maximum.[1] 32 GB 40 Mbit s SDHC cards have been recorded to be compatible and the true maximum comparable SDHC memory size and read write speed.

Olympus mju 9010

EASE OF USE IMAGE QUALITY SAMPLE IMAGES PRODUCT IMAGES RATING CONCLUSION...

EASE OF USE IMAGE QUALITY SAMPLE IMAGES PRODUCT IMAGES RATING CONCLUSION SPECIFICATIONS COMMENTS (16) Latest Reviews Cameras Lenses Introduction Announced at CES 2010, the 14-megapixel, 10x zoom Olympus mju 9010 (also known as the Olympus Stylus 9010) is the new flagship of the mju Stylus range. Boasting a 28-280mm equivalent zoom lens in a compact body, the range-topping Olympus mju 9010 offers image stabilisation, 720p HD movie recording, an in-camera manual, 2GB of internal memory and SD SDHC card support. Also on board is an iAuto mode that detects the five most commonly used scenes and adjusts settings automatically. A 2.7-inch rear LCD screen, Advanced Face Detection, AF Tracking, in-camera panorama stitching, Shadow Adjustment Technology, and a range of Magic Filters round off the features list.

Battery Operated Projector

This is Vintage battery operated projector A projector or image projector is an optical device...

This is Vintage battery operated projector A projector or image projector is an optical device that projects an image (or moving images) onto a surface, commonly a projection screen. Most projectors create an image by shining a light through a small transparent lens, but some newer types of projectors can project the image directly, by using lasers. A virtual retinal display, or retinal projector, is a projector that projects an image directly on the retina instead of using an external projection screen. The most common type of projector used today is called a video projector. Video projectors are digital replacements for earlier types of projectors such as slide projectors and overhead projectors. These earlier types of projectors were mostly replaced with digital video projectors throughout the 1990s and early 2000s,[1] but old analog projectors are still used at some places. The newest types of projectors are handheld projectors that use lasers or LEDs to project images.

HITACHI VM-E26e PAL VIDEO CAMCORDER

A classic Video model made with a powerful 32x Digital zoom, this is a classic Hitachi model from...

A classic Video model made with a powerful 32x Digital zoom, this is a classic Hitachi model from the 80 the 90s that s going to produce the classic retro camcorder footage. It doesn t feature a screen, instead just a viewfinder that plays back in black and white. The footage can be played back in full colour however when played on a screen using the AV cable or when transferred onto your device. Features 32 x Digital Zoom Optical 20x Black and White Viewfinder Full-Colour Video Footage Viewfinder Date Time Stamp Comes With Battery Battery Charger ( EU Plug - adapter needed for UK US) AV Cable

Vintage Cinema Projector

This vintage cinema projector was made in early 1895.

This vintage cinema projector was made in early 1895.