Cord
From Camera-wiki.org
| French companies () | ||
|---|---|---|
| Alsaphot | Angénieux | Arca Swiss | As de Trèfle | Atoms | Aubertin | Balcar | Bardin | Bauchet | Baudry | Bellieni | Berthiot | Boumsell | Boyer | Bronzavia | Cord | Cornu | Coronet | Darlot | Demaria-Lapierre | Derogy | Faller | FAP | Fex | Compagnie Française de Photographie | Gallus | Gaumont | Georges Paris | Girard | Gitzo | Goldstein | Héard & Mallinjod | Hermagis | Idam | Itier | Joux | Kafta | Kinax | Krauss | Lumière | Mackenstein | Manufrance | Mazo | MFAP | MIOM | Mollier | Mundus | Olbia | Omega | OPL | Pierrat | Précidès | Richard | Richard (Jules) | Roussel | Royer | SEM | Secam | SIAP | Soulé | Spirotechnique | Tiranty | Vergne | Zion (France) | ||
Cord was a short-lived French camera brand, lasting only through three box models, cheaply made of cardboard.
Box Cameras
- Cord (1945; simple 6x9 box for 120 film)
- Cord 47 (1947; switchable 6x9 or 6x4.5, 1/25 shutter, three apertures[1])
- Super-Cord (1947; adds yellow filter[2])
Links
- Cord cameras on www.collection-appareils.fr by Sylvain Halgand
- Cord cameras on Collection G. Even