Difference between revisions of "Vivitar V335"

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[[Category: Vivitar|V335]]
 
[[Category: Vivitar|V335]]
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[[Category: V|V335 Vivitar]]
 
[[Category: Cosina]]
 
[[Category: Cosina]]
 
[[Category: Japanese 35mm SLR]]
 
[[Category: Japanese 35mm SLR]]
 
[[Category: K mount]]
 
[[Category: K mount]]

Revision as of 08:01, 1 February 2021

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The Vivitar V335 is a 35mm SLR camera manufactured by Cosina and marketed by Vivitar in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

In 1987, Vivitar sponsored an art project created by ninth grade students at Peet Junior High School in Cedar Falls, IA in which the students created a "megasculpture" of a Vivitar V335 camera. The giant camera was constructed from plywood and masonite and measured 16 feet wide and 21 feet high. It included a flash unit and two Kodakcolor VR-G 200 film boxes. The flash unit actually fired, weighed 300 lbs, and had to be hoisted onto the camera by means of a hook-and-ladder truck.[1]

Specifications

  • Badging: Vivitar
  • Manufacturer: Cosina
  • Lens mount: Pentax K
  • ISO:
  • Shutter:
  • Shutter Speeds:
  • Flash sync:
  • Viewfinder:
  • Focusing:
  • Meter:
  • Battery:
  • Weight:


Notes

Links