Difference between revisions of "No. 4 Cartridge Kodak"

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|image_text= No.4 Cartridge Kodak 1898
 
|image_text= No.4 Cartridge Kodak 1898
 
|image_by= Geoff Harrisson
 
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|image_text= Back removed showing 5" rollfilm spool
 
|image_text= Back removed showing 5" rollfilm spool
 
|image_by= Geoff Harrisson
 
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|image_text= Model E, c.1902
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==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
 
<references />
 
<references />
  

Revision as of 08:30, 31 August 2016

The No. 4 Cartridge Kodak was a large and bulky camera made from 1897 to 1907 and took 4×5 inch exposures on 104 rollfilm. The first models had a wooden standard, later ones were metal. Two viewfinders are built-in for vertical and horizontal framing. This camera was the only Kodak that used the 5 inch wide No.104 rollfilm (called "cartridge" film then). Coe [1] states that a plate adapter was available and lists many variations in lenses and shutters.



Notes

  1. Brian Coe, Kodak Cameras, the First Hundred Years (Hove, UK: Hove Foto Books, 1988; ISBN 0-906447-44-5) p.87-88.