Difference between revisions of "Kodak Brownie Vecta"

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The '''Kodak Brownie Vecta''' was a moulded plastic [[127 film]] camera made in the UK by [[Kodak Ltd.]] from September 1963 until 1966.
 
The '''Kodak Brownie Vecta''' was a moulded plastic [[127 film]] camera made in the UK by [[Kodak Ltd.]] from September 1963 until 1966.
The design was by Kenneth Grange, and meant to give a comfortable holding position to minimise [[camera shake]].  The f/14 plastic lens had a fixed aperture, and there was only a single shutter speed; the  controls being limited to the bar-shaped [[shutter release]] on the front and the [[film advance|winding knob]] on the photographer's right.  Images were portrait format, 1⅝ × 2½ inches on [[127 film]].
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The design was by [[Kenneth Grange]], and meant to give a comfortable holding position to minimise [[camera shake]].  The f/14 plastic lens had a fixed aperture, and there was only a single shutter speed; the  controls being limited to the bar-shaped [[shutter release]] on the front and the [[film advance|winding knob]] on the photographer's right.  Images were portrait format, 1⅝ × 2½ inches on [[127 film]].
 
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Revision as of 00:55, 8 July 2008

The Kodak Brownie Vecta was a moulded plastic 127 film camera made in the UK by Kodak Ltd. from September 1963 until 1966. The design was by Kenneth Grange, and meant to give a comfortable holding position to minimise camera shake. The f/14 plastic lens had a fixed aperture, and there was only a single shutter speed; the controls being limited to the bar-shaped shutter release on the front and the winding knob on the photographer's right. Images were portrait format, 1⅝ × 2½ inches on 127 film.

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