Difference between revisions of "Comet 110"

From Camera-wiki.org
Jump to: navigation, search
(Initial page.)
 
m (minor links)
Line 3: Line 3:
 
| image_source=http://www.flickr.com/photos/artysmokes/4405815115/in/pool-camerapedia
 
| image_source=http://www.flickr.com/photos/artysmokes/4405815115/in/pool-camerapedia
 
| image=http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4003/4405815115_c150a68739_m.jpg
 
| image=http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4003/4405815115_c150a68739_m.jpg
| image_align=right
+
| image_align=left
 
| image_text=Comet 110{{br}}<small>by Arty Smokes {{creative commons}}</small>.
 
| image_text=Comet 110{{br}}<small>by Arty Smokes {{creative commons}}</small>.
 
}}
 
}}
Made in Italy by [[Bencini]] and sold in the UK by Boots the Chemist in the 1970s, the '''Comet 110''' was, as its name suggests, a camera that used [[110 film]]. It's a simple affair, with a fixed shutter speed, [[fixed focus]] and fixed aperture. It is small and lightweight, and was presumably very cheap to manufacture and purchase. It used Magicubes for interior photography. One nice design quirk is that the wrist-strap screws into a standard tripod mount.
+
Made in Italy by [[Bencini]] and sold in the UK by [[Boots|Boots the Chemist]] in the 1970s, the '''Comet 110''' was, as its name suggests, a camera that used [[110 film]]. It's a simple affair, with a fixed shutter speed, [[fixed focus]] and fixed aperture. It is small and lightweight, and was presumably very cheap to manufacture and purchase. It used [[Flashcubes#Flashcubes|Magicubes]] for interior photography. One nice design quirk is that the wrist-strap screws into a standard tripod mount.
  
 
[[Category:Bencini]]
 
[[Category:Bencini]]
 
[[Category:C|Comet 110]]
 
[[Category:C|Comet 110]]
 
[[Category:110 film]]
 
[[Category:110 film]]

Revision as of 01:04, 5 March 2010

This article is a stub. You can help Camera-wiki.org by expanding it.

Made in Italy by Bencini and sold in the UK by Boots the Chemist in the 1970s, the Comet 110 was, as its name suggests, a camera that used 110 film. It's a simple affair, with a fixed shutter speed, fixed focus and fixed aperture. It is small and lightweight, and was presumably very cheap to manufacture and purchase. It used Magicubes for interior photography. One nice design quirk is that the wrist-strap screws into a standard tripod mount.