Difference between revisions of "Filma (Thornton-Pickard)"

From Camera-wiki.org
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Noted name impressed in handle)
(Added Category:F)
 
Line 9: Line 9:
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
 
  
 
[[Category: 6x9 box]]
 
[[Category: 6x9 box]]
Line 15: Line 14:
 
[[Category: Thornton-Pickard]]
 
[[Category: Thornton-Pickard]]
 
[[Category: 1911-1914]]
 
[[Category: 1911-1914]]
 +
[[Category:F]]

Latest revision as of 07:12, 4 December 2022

This article is a stub. You can help Camera-wiki.org by expanding it.
This article needs photographs. You can help Camera-wiki.org by adding some. See adding images for help.


There is also a bakelite box camera named Filma, made in two sizes by the Italian maker of the same name.

The Filma is a box camera for 2¼x3¼-inch exposures on 120 film, made by Thornton-Pickard from about 1912.[1] It is wooden-bodied, with black leatherette covering, and has brilliant finders for vertical and horizontal orientation. It appears to have a single-speed shutter and no aperture control. 'T-P Filma' is impressed in the leather handle on top.[1]

The notes at Wood and Brass state that for the first year of its produciton, the camera was made with a metal strip running the full length of the body, which serves simply to hold the back on.[1] This was replaced in later cameras with more usual catches.


Notes