
Kodak 35 RF
This was my very first camera and I learned a lot about photography using it. I got it in 1976 and it still works!
Kodak 35 RF No. 1
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My first camera, a Kodak 35 RF. I got it in 1976.
Camera: Minolta X-9
Lens: Minolta MD Zoom 28-70mm, f/3.5, @ 28mm
Film: Kodak Ektar 100 (expired 06/2019)
Aperture: f/22
Shutter Speed: “B” (bulb), 5 seconds
Date: October 24th, 2020, 1.10 p.m.
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
Developing Chemicals: Unicolor C-41
Water pre-soak: 1 minute at 102 degrees
Developer: 3 ½ minutes at 102 degrees
Water rinse: 2 minutes (to keep chemicals clean)
Blix: 6 ½ minutes at 102 degrees
Water rinse: 2 minutes
Stabilizer: 1 minute at room temperature
Water rinse: 2 minutes
Minolta X-9 Ektar 100 Fall Tree 2020 36ff
My First Camera - Kodak 35 RF
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This is the very first camera I have ever had. It was given to me by my friend and neighbor, but it didn't work. I got it to working and learned a lot about photography using it. Since you had to adjust everything: Shutter speed, aperature, focus, etc., it gave a good grounding in the basics of the art of photograpy.
1976
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This is the very first picture I took that turned out usable. It was actually the fourth frame on the first roll of film I ever shot. And I was already trying advanced techniques by panning with the vehicle to blur the background.
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor, 100 ASA 35mm
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: June 1976
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
Kodak 35RF KSF5035 04mf
My First Selfie
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I was 15 years old, it was 1976, and this was from the first roll of film I ever shot in my very first camera - a Kodak 35 RF. And by the sixth frame of that 36 exposure roll, I'm already taking selfies! It took the eighth frame to get one to turn out, though. It's a little out of focus, because arm's length was closer than it could focus.
But, I was actually just testing to see how close the camera would focus. Yeah, that's the ticket.
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor, 100 ASA 35mm
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: June 1976
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
Kodak 35RF KSF5035 08if
Boating On Rend Lake, 1976
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This is Rend Lake, located in Franklin County in Southern Illinois. Considered one of the "7 Wonders of Illinois." This is, of course, a full-frame shot from the first roll of film I ever shot. I left part of the film edges in because of the three little notches in the frame at the top left of the image that identify the camera.
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor, 100 ASA 35mm
Aperture: ? (I haven't found my notes for this roll, yet.)
Shutter speed: ?
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: June, 1976
Location: Rend Lake, Franklin County, Southern Illinois, U.S.A.
First Roll 15-4hf
Girls At Camp
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This photograph just happens to have been one of the pictures I took on the first roll of film I ever shot. Pictured are my 13 year old sister and some other girls her age at camp.
Taken with a Kodak 35 RF rangefinder 35mm camera, this image was taken in June 1976, just after I had gotten the camera to work and started using it. To me, a very special image from a long time ago in my long photographic learning curve. My friend and neighbor, Dan, gave me this camera and that's his wife pictured in the background behind the truck.
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor, 100 ASA 35mm
Aperture: ? (I haven't found my notes for this roll, yet.
Shutter speed: ?
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: June 1976
Location: Lake Sallateeska Camp, Pinckneyville, Illinois, U.S.A.
Kodak 35RF KSF5035 13-2ff
Traffic At Night
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This is a shot of the traffic passing by my bedroom window on the highway in front of our house. I remember resting the camera solidly on the window sill and taking a long, timed exposure. This resulted in the streaks of light. Even on this first roll of film I ever shot, I was pushing my equipment to see what the limit was.
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor, 100 ASA 35mm
Aperture: ?
Shutter speed: Bulb
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: 1976
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
First Roll 10cf
The $64,000 Question
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"What is it?" As soon as I can find my notes for this roll, I'll let you know. Until then, I haven't the foggiest notion of what it was, other than that it was photographed close up and out of focus like this intentionally. I left part of the film edge in the photo because I thought the grooves at the top left of the frame looked interesting.
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor, 100 ASA 35mm
Aperture: ? (I haven't found my notes for this roll, yet.
Shutter speed: ?
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: 1976
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
Age of photographer: 15
First Roll 12if
The Gateway To The West
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This photo of the St. Louis, Missouri skyline and the Gateway Arch was from the first roll of film I ever shot.
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor, 100 ASA 35mm
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: July 1976
Location: St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A.
Kodak 35RF KSF5035 27gf
Bayer'sbrook Fire Department Engine No. 1
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This old fire truck was spotted in St. Louis, Missouri. It's a photo from the first roll of film I ever shot.
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor, 100 ASA 35mm
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: July 1976
Location: St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A.
Kodak 35RF KSF5035 30ff
Fast Car
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I remember we were driving driving in your car
The speed so fast I felt like I was drunk
City lights lay out before us
And your arm felt nice wrapped 'round my shoulder
And I had a feeling that I belonged
And I had a feeling I could be someone, be someone, be someone
You got a fast car.
Tracy Chapman, 1988.
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.
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor, 100 ASA 35mm (converted to b&w)
Aperture: ? (I haven't found my notes for this roll, yet.
Shutter speed: ?
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: 1976
Location: St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A.
This is an image from my first roll of film. Converted to black and white from the original color negative.
First Roll 08f
Tilling The Garden
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My Dad tilling his garden. This is one of my first pictures, and the camera had some focussing issues.
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor II, 100 ASA 35mm
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: 1977
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
Kodak 35RF 07gf
The Thinker
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A picture of my little brother looking thoughtful. He was lit using available light from the window to the right, (his left.)
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor II, 100 ASA 35mm
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: 1977
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
Kodak 35RF KSF5075 24gf
Black Night
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The front façade of my house back on a night in 1977. Taken with my first camera, a Kodak 35 RF.
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor, 100 ASA 35mm
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: 1977
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
Kodak 35RF KSF5075 23-2df
1977 Marquee
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The marquee for the motion picture "Close Encounters Of The Third Kind" when it first came out in 1977. I saw it then and it's still one of my favorite movies. Taken with my very first camera, a Kodak 35 RF rangefinder. (I still have it, too.)
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor, 100 ASA 35mm daylight film
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: 1977
Location: Harrisburg, Illinois, U.S.A.
Kodak 35RF KSF 5035 CE3K 17if
CE3K
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To say that I was eagerly awaiting the release of Close Encounters Of The Third Kind back in 1977 would be an understatement. I had read up on it, seen magazine articles and promos and when it came to a local theater on it's release, I went prepared. As I recall, it was a scene from the movie very close to this one that was used in the newspaper ads for the film and I wanted to recreate it for my own collection. Back then, nobody cared if you had a camera with you and since the one I used didn't have a flash, they must have assumed I couldn't take any pictures in a darkened theater. But, the screen itself provided all the light I needed for the shot. I used my trusty Kodak 35 RF rangefinder camera and was able to achieve my objective.
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor, 100 ASA 35mm
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: 1977
Location: Harrisburg, Illinois, U.S.A.
It Came From Outer Space
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A screen shot (movie screen) of the mother ship in Close Encounters Of The Third Kind. Taken at the theater when the movie first came out in 1977.
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor, 100 ASA 35mm
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: 1977
Location: Harrisburg, Illinois, U.S.A.
KSF5035 01-2ef
Encounter With Richard Dreyfuss, 1977
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Movie marquees from 1977 - both featuring a movie starring Richard Dreyfuss.
Camera: Kodak 35 RF rangefinder (made in 1948)
Lens: Kodak Anastar 50mm, f/3.5
Film: Kodak Kodacolor, 100 ASA 35mm
Exposure mode: Manual (of course!)
Date: 1977
Location: Harrisburg, Illinois, U.S.A.
CE3K 4df
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