The Limbo Connection's photos with the keyword: Kodak
Kodak Instamatic 204
The Velox Girl
01 Aug 2016 |
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With the aid of the simple editing tools in the Paintbrush application, I have attempted to tidy up the photograph which I bought on a whim a few months ago. I have also cropped it to a square format and applied an 'antique' finish. The earlier version is at www.ipernity.com/doc/341635/40626728
The original photograph was printed on Kodak Velox paper, a very slow printing paper producing a blue-black image suitable for contact printing. As the original print measures 3.25 x 4.25 inches it is reasonable to suppose the negative came from 118 type roll film such as a Box Brownie might need, or a Kodak Model 3 or a Hawk-Eye. All this helps to date the photograph, but the best indicator is on the reverse which has a repeat motif of ‘Kodak/Velox/Paper' in three lines. That dates it to sometime in the 1950s or 1960s, unless the developer was using old stock. Kodak discontinued that paper in 1968.
Kodak advertised Velox as ‘the only photographic paper made exclusively for amateur negatives’. The use of Velox suggests that the print may have been the work of a keen photographer. The imperfections on this particular print indicate it was not made by a laboratory striving to maintain a business reputation.
I know there is no reason not to own photographs which you have not taken yourself, and which are of people whom you do not know, yet my experience with the image makes me feel slightly voyeuristic. Ho-hum.
Wine of 1969
Kodak
31 May 2014 |
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The Kodak Instamatic 204 was made in the U.K. It was introduced in January, 1966 and withdrawn in November, 1968. It used 126 film cartridges and flashcubes. It had a 41mm lens set to f/6.6. The shutter fired at either 1/40th or 1/60th of a second, depending on how you set the dial at the front. People bought Instamatics in their millions because there wasn't any tiresome roll-film handling and fiddly controls to understand.
Kodak Colour
26 May 2014 |
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Photographed in Bath with a Nikon D50 and a Nikkor 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 G lens.
The people who processed 35 mm film never cared about your photographs. That’s just one reason why digital is better.
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