Re: Old Slides

2002-01-16 Thread Peter Alling

These could from the description be either old 828 film or Kodak INSTAMATIC 
126
film.  I don't know if Kodak ever made Color slides for 828 but I would assume
that Kodachrome might have been available.

At 10:28 AM 1/14/2002 -0500, you wrote:
Hello all,
   I am in the process of converting my late father's slide library into
prints, partly because the slides are starting to deteriorate (fading and
color shift) and partly because nobody in my family has a slide projector
anymore and this library contains all pictures of the family between 1960
and about 1985.

Whilst copying the slides I came across some of a strange shape, they look
like 35mm slides i.e. the slide mount is the same size as a 3mm slide. the
difference is that the opening in the middle of the mount is square (I would
guess about 24mm or thereabouts). On dismantling a mount the negative itself
is square and seems to lack the usual sprocket holes (only 1 being evident
instead of the usual row). The film is Kodak, but that's all I know. Maybe
this is a simple question, but I'd like to know what format this film is and
what sort of camera might have been used, just for interest... I don't know
of any other format camera used by my father other than 35mm, but these sure
look like slides he has taken. I would date these particular slides as being
around 1970.

Regards,
/\/\ick...
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Vs: Old Slides

2002-01-15 Thread Raimo Korhonen

Also Rollei A 26 P/S and Rollei SL 26 SLR.
All the best!
Raimo
Personal photography homepage at http://personal.inet.fi/private/raimo.korhonen

-Alkuperäinen viesti-
Lähettäjä: Tom Rittenhouse [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Vastaanottaja: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Päivä: 15. tammikuuta 2002 0:37
Aihe: Re: Old Slides


- Original Message -
From: Mark Roberts [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2002 1:49 PM
Subject: RE: Old Slides

 I had no idea anyone ever offered any kind of quality cameras for 126; all
 I ever saw were thos Instamatics. That's why I was surprised that there
 was slide film in 126 format: I couldn't imaging an Instamatic getting the
 exposure close enough to make it worth while.

Kodak Retina 126 SLR
Zeiss Contacts 126 SLR
to name a couple of reletively decent 126 cameras.
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Old Slides

2002-01-14 Thread Mick Maguire

Hello all,
  I am in the process of converting my late father's slide library into
prints, partly because the slides are starting to deteriorate (fading and
color shift) and partly because nobody in my family has a slide projector
anymore and this library contains all pictures of the family between 1960
and about 1985.

Whilst copying the slides I came across some of a strange shape, they look
like 35mm slides i.e. the slide mount is the same size as a 3mm slide. the
difference is that the opening in the middle of the mount is square (I would
guess about 24mm or thereabouts). On dismantling a mount the negative itself
is square and seems to lack the usual sprocket holes (only 1 being evident
instead of the usual row). The film is Kodak, but that's all I know. Maybe
this is a simple question, but I'd like to know what format this film is and
what sort of camera might have been used, just for interest... I don't know
of any other format camera used by my father other than 35mm, but these sure
look like slides he has taken. I would date these particular slides as being
around 1970.

Regards,
/\/\ick...
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Re: Old Slides?

2002-01-14 Thread Collin Brendemuehl

Yes.  My wife shot many, many 126 images in the 70s when she was on a missions trip in 
Peru.
Even her shots of Machupichu (I certain someone will correct my spelling!) are good, 
even with an inexpensive camera.

Collin

===
From: =?iso-8859-1?Q?Mark=20Roberts?= [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Subject: =?iso-8859-1?Q?RE=3A=20Old=20Slides?= 

Sounds like 126 format. Did they ever do slide film for that? 


--
.
---
I know what I'm doing.
Picard, Star Trek: First Contact
--
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RE: Old Slides

2002-01-14 Thread Rob Brigham

My dad still has one, I could get it and photograph it if you want?

 -Original Message-
 From: Mick Maguire [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: 14 January 2002 17:07
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: RE: Old Slides
 
 
 Instamatic... Magicubes... drop-in loading
 
 Of course! This rings some very distant bells. I vaguely 
 remember a camera
 in our household which was a Kodak Instamatic all I 
 remember was it had a
 silvery looking front and came in a yellow Kodak box, that 
 was kind of like
 a display tray/case. It did indeed use Magicubes (which I 
 used to have great
 fun dis-assembling as a child!). From what I recall this camera was my
 Mother's. Many thanks to all who answered!   I'm off to eBay 
 to see if I can
 see anything that resembles my very faint memories of this.   :0)
 
 Regards,
 /\/\ick...
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Joe Wilensky
 Sent: Monday, January 14, 2002 11:21 AM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: RE: Old Slides
 
 
 Mick,
 
 Sounds like the 126 Instamatic film. Same physical size as the 35mm
 strip, but only one row of small sprocket holes, which actually
 allowed for an image size greater (in height, anyway) than that on
 traditional double-sprocketed 35mm film.
 
 These cameras must have sold by the millions from 1964 through the
 late '70s, most with fixed focus and aperture lenses. They had
 drop-in loading, and all cameras were made to take flash easily --
 first with single AG-1 bulbs, then with flashcubes, then Magicubes,
 and then the Flipflash. For cloudy days, you could put a spent
 flashcube in the socket, which would increase your exposure by a stop
 by reducing the shutter speed from about 1/90 to 1/45. Better models
 had electric eye exposure.
 
 By the early '70s, some predicted that 126 (and the new 110
 cartridge) would spell the end of 35mm by the end of the decade.
 Kodak and Contaflex made high-end SLRs that took 126, and many
 cheaper brands like GAF offered entry-level snapshot cameras.
 
 My parents had only a Kodak X-15 Instamatic camera, and took many
 rolls of Kodachrome 64 slide film for family snapshots. My first new
 camera was an X-15F (it took Flipflash) for my 10th birthday in
 October 1979.
 
 126 offered better image quality than 110 (and far better than the
 later Disc film, which wasn't introduced until 1981, as best as I can
 recall), but I think its default position as being a snapshot format
 or for amateurs, plus an inherent problem with keeping the film
 sufficiently flat, spelled its eventual doom as compact 35mm cameras
 with autofocus began showing up in the late '70s.
 
 I don't think 126 is completely discontinued, although I haven't seen
 it anywhere in quite a long time. Can it still be bought in bulk from
 Kodak?
 
 The slides, since they have nearly the same picture area as 35mm, are
 generally of very nice quality, especially for average outdoor shots
 and well-exposed flash shots.
 
 Joe
 
 Date: Mon, 14 Jan 2002 10:28:24 -0500
 From: Mick Maguire [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Old Slides
 
 Hello all,
I am in the process of converting my late father's slide 
 library into
 prints, partly because the slides are starting to 
 deteriorate (fading and
 color shift) and partly because nobody in my family has a 
 slide projector
 anymore and this library contains all pictures of the family 
 between 1960
 and about 1985.
 
 Whilst copying the slides I came across some of a strange 
 shape, they look
 like 35mm slides i.e. the slide mount is the same size as a 
 3mm slide. the
 difference is that the opening in the middle of the mount is 
 square (I
 would
 guess about 24mm or thereabouts). On dismantling a mount the negative
 itself
 is square and seems to lack the usual sprocket holes (only 1 
 being evident
 instead of the usual row). The film is Kodak, but that's all 
 I know. Maybe
 this is a simple question, but I'd like to know what format 
 this film is
 and
 what sort of camera might have been used, just for 
 interest... I don't know
 of any other format camera used by my father other than 
 35mm, but these
 sure
 look like slides he has taken. I would date these particular 
 slides as
 being
 around 1970.
 
 Regards,
 /\/\ick...
 --
 
 Joe Wilensky
 Staff Writer
 Media and Technology Services - Cornell University
 1150 Comstock Hall
 Ithaca, NY 14853-0901
 e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 tel: 607-255-1575
 fax: 607-255-9873
 Please visit our Web site at http://www.mediasrv.cornell.edu
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Re: Old Slides

2002-01-14 Thread LEDMRVM

In a message dated 1/14/2002 12:09:12 PM US Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 !   I'm off to eBay to see if I can
 see anything that resembles my very faint memories of this.   :0)
 
 Regards,
 /\/\ick...
 
 

Have a look at Instamatics here: 
http://www.thompson-grp.com/fix/images/instam

Regards,
Ed M.
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RE: Old Slides?

2002-01-14 Thread Matamoros, Cesar A.

I had an Instamatic as a kid.  I have an album with photos taken
with that Kodak.  I still have that camera.  Also the Hawkeye Instamatic
that I think my sister got from sending in proof of purchases from Sugar
Smacks cereal boxes (if memory serves me right.)  I never shot slides.  It
was always print film.  I assume I paid for all this out of my allowance,
though my father did use to have a love of photography.  This was before the
family came along...

I recently pulled out the 126 shots taken of my first trip to the
Copan Ruins in Honduras.  This site was the one that started my love of
archaeology and ruins.  It is interesting to see how the site has changed
over the years and also how well the photos came out - I even shot into the
sun on a couple of them.  How I wish I had taken more photos back then.  I
have been to Macchu Pichu - it was recently and I was shooting 35mm at that
point.  Lovely place, definitely worth spending the night there.

César Matamoros II
Panama City, Florida


 -Original Message-
 From: Collin Brendemuehl [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Monday, January 14, 2002 1:02 PM
 To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject:  Re: Old Slides?
 
 Yes.  My wife shot many, many 126 images in the 70s when she was on a
 missions trip in Peru.
 Even her shots of Machupichu (I certain someone will correct my spelling!)
 are good, even with an inexpensive camera.
 
 Collin
 
 ===
 From: =?iso-8859-1?Q?Mark=20Roberts?= [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 Subject: =?iso-8859-1?Q?RE=3A=20Old=20Slides?= 
 
 Sounds like 126 format. Did they ever do slide film for that? 
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RE: Old Slides

2002-01-14 Thread Mark Roberts

 These cameras must have sold by the millions from 1964 through the
 late '70s, most with fixed focus and aperture lenses. They had
 drop-in loading, and all cameras were made to take flash easily --
 first with single AG-1 bulbs, then with flashcubes, then Magicubes,
 and then the Flipflash. For cloudy days, you could put a spent
 flashcube in the socket, which would increase your exposure by a stop
 by reducing the shutter speed from about 1/90 to 1/45. Better models
 had electric eye exposure.
 
 By the early '70s, some predicted that 126 (and the new 110
 cartridge) would spell the end of 35mm by the end of the decade.
 Kodak and Contaflex made high-end SLRs that took 126, and many
 cheaper brands like GAF offered entry-level snapshot cameras.
 
 My parents had only a Kodak X-15 Instamatic camera, and took many
 rolls of Kodachrome 64 slide film for family snapshots. My first new
 camera was an X-15F (it took Flipflash) for my 10th birthday in
 October 1979.
 
 126 offered better image quality than 110 (and far better than the
 later Disc film, which wasn't introduced until 1981, as best as I can
 recall), but I think its default position as being a snapshot format
 or for amateurs, plus an inherent problem with keeping the film
 sufficiently flat, spelled its eventual doom as compact 35mm cameras
 with autofocus began showing up in the late '70s.

I had no idea anyone ever offered any kind of quality cameras for 126; all
I ever saw were thos Instamatics. That's why I was surprised that there
was slide film in 126 format: I couldn't imaging an Instamatic getting the
exposure close enough to make it worth while.

I'll bet you're right about the film flatness issues being the achilles
heel of this format. Keeping the film flat and sufficiently perpendicular
to the lens axis would seem to be almost impossible in those cheap plastic
cartridges. And the 25mm x 25mm square size seems a bit weird; you don't
really have the film area to be able to afford to crop down to a rectangular
format like you do with 6 x 6 medium format ;-)


-- 
Mark Roberts
www.robertstech.com
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RE: Old Slides

2002-01-14 Thread Mick Maguire

thanks for the offer Rob, but Ed's link and eBay have yielded loads to look
at, and I am pretty sure this is what is in my childhood memories. I
certainly don't remember the camera ever being used, (but the I was only
about 4 at the time of the slides), I only remember it in it's box gathering
dust in a closet. I wonder what ever happened to it. I do have a vague
feeling that my father offered it to me and I said I wanted a real camera
like his... his was a Spotmatic F which I now indeed own.

Regards,
/\/\ick...



-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Rob Brigham
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2002 1:02 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Old Slides


My dad still has one, I could get it and photograph it if you want?
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Re: Old slides ... Now: The 126 Instamatic

2002-01-14 Thread Len Paris

I remember owning and using a Kodak Pony 135 in the 1950's.  It
was a fully manual 35mm camera and I either had to guess the
focussing distance or use an external rangefinder.  I used the
sunny 16 rule for exposure extensively back in those days.

Len
---


- Original Message -
From: Joe Wilensky [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2002 1:50 PM
Subject: Was: Old slides ... Now: The 126 Instamatic


 Has anyone ever read Glass, Brass  Chrome: The American 35mm
 Miniature Camera by Kalton C. Lahue and Joseph A. Bailey?

 It lovingly and technically traces the American 35mm camera
industry,
 framing it in perspective with Leica and Contax, telling the
story of
 Argus, Univex, Perfex, Kodak, and more, and closing with what
they
 were sure was the imminent demise of the 35mm format. The
copyright
 date? 1972, by the University of Oklahoma Press.

 Here's what their perspective was as they put this book
together in
 the late '60s and early '70s:

 Engineering design of the Kodak Instamatic, under the name
Project
 13, was completed in 1961, with production beginning in 1962.
It was
 probably Kodak's best-kept secret of the century; few even
within
 Kodak were aware of its existence.

 The Kodak Instamatic, while not a genuine scientific or
technological
 breakthrough, was a masterful example of engineering ingenuity
and
 packaging (even the cheapest Instamatic camera was fitted with
an
 f/3.5 plastic lens, which was physically and permanently
stopped down
 to f/11 or f/16 for better definition, a practice the Ansco
Memo had
 used in the '30s.

 The cartridge, known briefly as the Kodapak, was made of a
special
 polystyrene stable enough to hold the film flat (or reasonably
so, I
 guess), but it was also inexpensive enough for mass
production.

 Designers decided on a square format to utilize the full
covering
 power of a lens with a short focal length, which allowed the
camera
 to be slimmer wtihout the need for a collapsible front.

 Within the first two years of the Instamatic's introduction,
more
 than 7.5 million cameras were sold (in seven models) -- almost
half
 of which were sold overseas.

 Surveys at the time showed that while owners of other cameras
used an
 average of four rolls a year, Instamatic users used eight
rolls.
 Kodak sold 50 million cartridges of film in the first 21
months after
 the format's introduction -- which, of course, was the primary
goal
 it set to achieve: increased film sales.

 The introduction of the Kodak 126 Instamatic cartridge was
 devastating to the Japanese photographic industry, which only
 survived by forming a cartel to restrict production during
1965-66.

 The high-end Kodak Instamatic X-90, featuring an Ektar f/2.8
lens and
 some sort of exposure computer that allowed for nearly program
 exposure, alone outsold all the rest of the world's quality
 rangefinders combined.

 Kodak's Instamatic Reflex, which was manufactured in Germany
by Kodak
 A.G., replaced the famed Retina line.

 No American manufacturer produced a camera using 35mm film at
the time.

 Within four years after its introduction, the Instamatic had
cut
 total 35mm sales nearly in half, from 600,000 to 325,000. And
while
 1971 sales figures showed the 35mm camera holding its own, it
stands
 no chance of ever catching up to its brother with the plastic
 cartridge, the authors boldly stated. The 35mm cameras once
 manufactured in America died and are now half-forgotten, but
the
 rectangular negative took on new life in a square shape and is
firmly
 established today as the format of the future.

 Without automation, acrylic-lens technology, and Yankee
ingenuity,
 there would probably be no American camera industry today, the
 authors said.


 Any comments? This is at least partially on topic, as Asahi
certainly
 was affected by the 126 format's popularity, as were all
Japanese
 manufacturers.

 And they do have at least one Pentax mention: In a photo (the
small
 book is very nicely illustrated) showing the Exakta, the Asahi
 Pentax, the Alpa Alnea, and the Edixa Reflex, the caption
states:
 Four reasons for the decline of quality American cameras are
these
 products produced by foreign manufacturers in the 1950s. Left
to
 right: The dated but popular Exakta, the Asahi Pentax (later
to
 become the very popular Honeywell Pentax) ...

 Joe

 I had no idea anyone ever offered any kind of quality cameras
for 126; all
 I ever saw were thos Instamatics. That's why I was surprised
that there
 was slide film in 126 format: I couldn't imaging an
Instamatic getting the
 exposure close enough to make it worth while.
 
 I'll bet you're right about the film flatness issues being
the achilles
 heel of this format. Keeping the film flat and sufficiently
perpendicular
 to the lens axis would seem to be almost impossible in those
cheap plastic
 cartridges. And the 25mm x 25mm square size seems a bit
weird; you don't
 really have the film area to be able to afford to crop down

Re: Old Slides - Instamatics

2002-01-14 Thread LEDMRVM

In a message dated 1/14/2002 1:54:09 PM US Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 thanks for the offer Rob, but Ed's link and eBay have yielded loads to look
 at, and I am pretty sure this is what is in my childhood memories. I
 certainly don't remember the camera ever being used, (but the I was only
 about 4 at the time of the slides), I only remember it in it's box 
 gathering
 dust in a closet. I wonder what ever happened to it. I do have a vague
 feeling that my father offered it to me and I said I wanted a real camera
 like his... his was a Spotmatic F which I now indeed own.
 
 Regards,
 /\/\ick...
 
 
 

Mick - 
If you find an Instamatic that strikes a chord, send me an e-mail with its 
model designation. I have several in my (bursting) basement shelf collection 
- if I have the right model you can have it for the postage. They all came 
from garage sales or Goodwill type stores at prices barely above free.

Regards,
Ed M.
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Re: Was: Old slides ... Now: The 126 Instamatic

2002-01-14 Thread LEDMRVM

In a message dated 1/14/2002 2:51:09 PM US Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 I had no idea anyone ever offered any kind of quality cameras for 126; all
 I ever saw were thos Instamatics. That's why I was surprised that there
 was slide film in 126 format: I couldn't imaging an Instamatic getting the
 exposure close enough to make it worth while.
 
 

Kodak offerred 40+ models of 126 Instamatics at various times. Fifteen or so 
of these had some kind of exposure meter. The Kodak Instamatic Reflex was 
made in Germany by Kodak AG and patterned on the 35mm Retina Reflexes. It had 
interchangeable (leaf shutter) lenses. A fantastic (and pricey) reference for 
obselete cameras is The Price Guide to Antique and Classic Cameras by James 
McKeown.
900+ pages of abbreviated history, illustrations and descriptions.

Regards,
Ed M.
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RE: Old Slides - Instamatics

2002-01-14 Thread Mick Maguire

Wow! thanks Ed! :)

Regards,
/\/\ick...




-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2002 3:22 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Old Slides - Instamatics


In a message dated 1/14/2002 1:54:09 PM US Eastern Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


 thanks for the offer Rob, but Ed's link and eBay have yielded loads to
look
 at, and I am pretty sure this is what is in my childhood memories. I
 certainly don't remember the camera ever being used, (but the I was only
 about 4 at the time of the slides), I only remember it in it's box
 gathering
 dust in a closet. I wonder what ever happened to it. I do have a vague
 feeling that my father offered it to me and I said I wanted a real
camera
 like his... his was a Spotmatic F which I now indeed own.

 Regards,
 /\/\ick...




Mick -
If you find an Instamatic that strikes a chord, send me an e-mail with its
model designation. I have several in my (bursting) basement shelf collection
- if I have the right model you can have it for the postage. They all came
from garage sales or Goodwill type stores at prices barely above free.

Regards,
Ed M.
-
This message is from the Pentax-Discuss Mail List.  To unsubscribe,
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Re: Old Slides

2002-01-14 Thread Tom Rittenhouse

Probably 126, unless he had an old Robot 24 camera. The Robot always was
pretty rare, so 126 is most likley.

Ciao,
graywolf
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



- Original Message -
From: Mick Maguire [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2002 10:28 AM
Subject: Old Slides


 Hello all,
   I am in the process of converting my late father's slide library into
 prints, partly because the slides are starting to deteriorate (fading and
 color shift) and partly because nobody in my family has a slide projector
 anymore and this library contains all pictures of the family between 1960
 and about 1985.

 Whilst copying the slides I came across some of a strange shape, they look
 like 35mm slides i.e. the slide mount is the same size as a 3mm slide. the
 difference is that the opening in the middle of the mount is square (I
would
 guess about 24mm or thereabouts). On dismantling a mount the negative
itself
 is square and seems to lack the usual sprocket holes (only 1 being evident
 instead of the usual row). The film is Kodak, but that's all I know. Maybe
 this is a simple question, but I'd like to know what format this film is
and
 what sort of camera might have been used, just for interest... I don't
know
 of any other format camera used by my father other than 35mm, but these
sure
 look like slides he has taken. I would date these particular slides as
being
 around 1970.

 Regards,
 /\/\ick...
 -
 This message is from the Pentax-Discuss Mail List.  To unsubscribe,
 go to http://www.pdml.net and follow the directions. Don't forget to
 visit the Pentax Users' Gallery at http://pug.komkon.org .
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Re: Old Slides

2002-01-14 Thread Tom Rittenhouse

- Original Message -
From: Mark Roberts [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2002 1:49 PM
Subject: RE: Old Slides

 I had no idea anyone ever offered any kind of quality cameras for 126; all
 I ever saw were thos Instamatics. That's why I was surprised that there
 was slide film in 126 format: I couldn't imaging an Instamatic getting the
 exposure close enough to make it worth while.

Kodak Retina 126 SLR
Zeiss Contacts 126 SLR
to name a couple of reletively decent 126 cameras.
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