Difference between revisions of "Kodak Retina I"
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The eventual triumph of the [[35mm|135 format]] owed much to the acceptance of the Retina as a compact, precision 35mm camera, as well as to the success of lower-priced alternatives such as those manufactured by [[Argus]]. | The eventual triumph of the [[35mm|135 format]] owed much to the acceptance of the Retina as a compact, precision 35mm camera, as well as to the success of lower-priced alternatives such as those manufactured by [[Argus]]. | ||
− | The following is a list of Retina I cameras produced from 1934 to 1941 and 1945 to 1950. | + | The following is a list of Retina I cameras produced from 1934 to 1940/1941? and 1945 to 1950. |
* Typ 117 Retina - 1934 to 1935 | * Typ 117 Retina - 1934 to 1935 | ||
* Typ 118 Retina - 1935 to 1936 | * Typ 118 Retina - 1935 to 1936 | ||
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[http://www.flickr.com/photos/16822508@N05/2388651179/in/pool-camerapedia http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2388/2388651179_7e105c4aa6_m.jpg] | [http://www.flickr.com/photos/16822508@N05/2388651179/in/pool-camerapedia http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2388/2388651179_7e105c4aa6_m.jpg] | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
− | * Typ 148 Retina I - 1939 to | + | * Typ 148 Retina I - 1939 to 1940 |
* Typ 149 Retina I - 1939 to 1940 | * Typ 149 Retina I - 1939 to 1940 | ||
− | * Typ 167 Retina I - | + | * Typ 167 Retina I - 1940 - ? 1941 |
* Kodak AG stopped camera production in the summer of 1941. Plant was requisitioned by German government to make time-fuses. | * Kodak AG stopped camera production in the summer of 1941. Plant was requisitioned by German government to make time-fuses. | ||
* First camera parts for post-war production manufactured in July 1945. | * First camera parts for post-war production manufactured in July 1945. |
Revision as of 02:30, 16 November 2009
The orignal Kodak Retina (type 117) is a historically significant camera, because Kodak introduced the now ubiquitous daylight-loading 135 cartridge for this camera. (Earlier 35mm cameras required manually spooling bulk 35mm cine film into proprietary cassettes.) The design of the Retina borrowed significantly from the 127-film Vollenda which had been manufactured by the August Nagel Camera Works until its purchase and re-christening as Kodak AG.
The Retina I models are distinguished from the II and III series by being scale-focused, rather than using a rangefinder.
The eventual triumph of the 135 format owed much to the acceptance of the Retina as a compact, precision 35mm camera, as well as to the success of lower-priced alternatives such as those manufactured by Argus.
The following is a list of Retina I cameras produced from 1934 to 1940/1941? and 1945 to 1950.
- Typ 117 Retina - 1934 to 1935
- Typ 118 Retina - 1935 to 1936
- Typ 119 Retina I - 1936 to 1938
- Typ 126 Retina I - 1936 to 1937
- Typ 141 Retina I - 1937 to 1939
- Typ 143 Retina I - 1938 to 1939
- Typ 148 Retina I - 1939 to 1940
- Typ 149 Retina I - 1939 to 1940
- Typ 167 Retina I - 1940 - ? 1941
- Kodak AG stopped camera production in the summer of 1941. Plant was requisitioned by German government to make time-fuses.
- First camera parts for post-war production manufactured in July 1945.
- Typ 010 Retina I - November 1945 to June 1949
- Typ 013 Retina I - August 1949 to December 1950
- The Retina camera illustrated top right is a Typ 119 Retina I.
- The Retina camera illustrated bottom right is a late production Typ 148 Retina I.