Difference between revisions of "Snappa (folding)"

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|image_text= ad of 1902
 
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The '''Snappa Camera''' was made by [[Rochester Optical Co.|Rochester Optical and Camera Co.]] around 1902. It was a folding bed magazine camera. The chief attraction of the camera was the special drawer in its back. This drawer was the magazine which could be loaded with 24 film sheets or 12 glass plates. When this drawer was just drawn out of the side and pushed back into it the plate or sheet in the focal plane was exchanged automatically. This mechanism was advertised as "The Magic Magazine". The camera had a brilliant viewfinder, an ''Auto'' shutter with speeds 1, 1/2, 1/5, 1/25 and 1/100 sec. plus T and B mode, a vertically movable lens standard, and probably always a quite good lens, for example one from [[Goerz]], or a ''Plantograph'' lens of [[Bausch & Lomb]].
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The '''Snappa Camera''' was made by [[Rochester Optical Co.|Rochester Optical and Camera Co.]] around 1902. It was a folding bed [[magazine camera]]. The chief attraction of the camera was the special drawer in its back. This drawer was the magazine which could be loaded with 24 film sheets or 12 glass plates. When this drawer was just drawn out of the side and pushed back in, the plate or sheet in the focal plane was exchanged automatically. This mechanism was advertised as "The Magic Magazine". The camera had a [[Brilliant_finder|brilliant viewfinder]], an ''Auto'' shutter with speeds 1, 1/2, 1/5, 1/25 and 1/100 sec. plus T and B mode, a vertically movable lens standard, and probably always a quite good lens, for example one from [[Goerz]], or a ''Plantograph'' lens of [[Bausch & Lomb]].
  
 
[[Category:Magazine camera]]
 
[[Category:Magazine camera]]
 
[[Category:1900-1905]]
 
[[Category:1900-1905]]
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[[Category: S]]

Revision as of 23:10, 15 September 2008

The Snappa Camera was made by Rochester Optical and Camera Co. around 1902. It was a folding bed magazine camera. The chief attraction of the camera was the special drawer in its back. This drawer was the magazine which could be loaded with 24 film sheets or 12 glass plates. When this drawer was just drawn out of the side and pushed back in, the plate or sheet in the focal plane was exchanged automatically. This mechanism was advertised as "The Magic Magazine". The camera had a brilliant viewfinder, an Auto shutter with speeds 1, 1/2, 1/5, 1/25 and 1/100 sec. plus T and B mode, a vertically movable lens standard, and probably always a quite good lens, for example one from Goerz, or a Plantograph lens of Bausch & Lomb.