Difference between revisions of "Kodak Stereo"
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− | The '''Kodak Stereo''' is a 35mm [[stereo]] camera that was made by [[Kodak]] from 1954 to 1959. About | + | The '''Kodak Stereo''' is a [[35mm]] [[stereo]] camera that was made by [[Kodak]] from 1954 to 1959. About 100,000 were made to a design by [[Arthur H Crapsey]]. |
− | It takes a pair of 23x24mm format pictures at each exposure. It has a brown bakelite body, a pair of three element Kodak Anaston 35mm f:3.5 lenses, with a coupled setting of the focus by rotating rings, and of the aperture and shutter speed (from 1/25 to 1/200 plus B) by sliding bars. The viewfinder is between the two lenses. | + | It takes a pair of 23x24mm format pictures at each exposure. It has a brown [[bakelite]] body, a pair of three element Kodak Anaston 35mm f:3.5 lenses, with a coupled setting of the focus by rotating rings, and of the aperture and shutter speed (from 1/25 to 1/200 plus B) by sliding bars. The viewfinder is between the two lenses. |
It was the first stereo camera made by Kodak since the Stereo Kodak, Model 1<ref>[http://www.brownie-camera.com/kodakcam.shtml Kodak Cameras], at the [http://www.brownie-camera.com Brownie Camera Page]</ref> was last made in 1925 and no Kodak stereo cameras have been made since. | It was the first stereo camera made by Kodak since the Stereo Kodak, Model 1<ref>[http://www.brownie-camera.com/kodakcam.shtml Kodak Cameras], at the [http://www.brownie-camera.com Brownie Camera Page]</ref> was last made in 1925 and no Kodak stereo cameras have been made since. |
Revision as of 01:28, 9 April 2008
Kodak Stereo Camera |
The Kodak Stereo is a 35mm stereo camera that was made by Kodak from 1954 to 1959. About 100,000 were made to a design by Arthur H Crapsey.
It takes a pair of 23x24mm format pictures at each exposure. It has a brown bakelite body, a pair of three element Kodak Anaston 35mm f:3.5 lenses, with a coupled setting of the focus by rotating rings, and of the aperture and shutter speed (from 1/25 to 1/200 plus B) by sliding bars. The viewfinder is between the two lenses.
It was the first stereo camera made by Kodak since the Stereo Kodak, Model 1[1] was last made in 1925 and no Kodak stereo cameras have been made since.
Links
- The Kodak Stereo at Sydney Stereo Club
- Kodak Stereo repair at www.stereoscopy.com
- 35 Stereo at Camera collection by Sylvain Halgand
- Stereo Camera in collection by Ed's Kodak Collection (NL)
- Kodak Stereo instruction manual
Notes
- ↑ Kodak Cameras, at the Brownie Camera Page