Antique Kodak Cameras: The filters recommended for use with antique kodak cameras Films are the antique kodak cameras Sky Filter, antique kodak cameras Color Filter, and Wratten Kl, K2, G, and A Filters. There are other filters but they are intended for more or less technical and specific purposes and need not be mentioned here. They are described fully in these Eastman antique kodak cameras Company publications: "Filters-antique kodak cameras Data Book on Filters and Other Lens Accessories," "The Photography of Colored Objects," and "Wratten Light Filters," all available at antique kodak cameras dealers'.
These pictures came to be called "snapshots," a word used by hunters to describe shooting a firearm from the hip, without taking careful aim. The first antique kodak cameras, like many other detective cameras, had no finder: the Camera was simply pointed at the subject. The "brilliant finders" later built into the bodies of box cameras gave images only the size of a postage stamp. Careful composition was hardly possible with them, nor was it of concern, for most snapshooters had little artistic ambition.
The greatest improvement in the history of cola photography came with the perfection of film coatee with three layers of emulsion that could be used in an] camera, and required merely a single exposure for ead picture. Available in 1935 for 16mm motion pictuif cameras and in 1937 for 35mm still cameras, this Kotk chrome film was the invention of Leopold Mannes am Leopold Godowsky, working in collaboration with re search scientists at the Eastman antique kodak cameras Company. Th< process is based on the 1912 invention of dye-couplinj development by Rudolf Fischer of Berlin.
|
|