Friday, March 25, 2016

A Pocket Full of Rice A Row^Knee To Tack The Wall^It Off?? Its A Mirror.


For National Geographic for KIDS,
the basis of a canister to the easy addition to Film and Click,
that excitement of the strap for the Hold,
and a Flashbulb curious Parent.

Being on the Can^Door,
a veal??,
the By^Sun,
a Spreckles Lake to Polo Park at Golden Gate Bridge??

These are the easy speakers,
that Grocery Store coin to Kodak on the drop box,
back to the photograph with negatives held,
than the great wonder once a Thought.

In that is the Cheese to the Crackers??,
that concert of silence??,
shoulder a package to the secret looking as the picture is worth a Thousand Words!!


Awe tsk Tick or the Understanding the skill of the Divide??,
is that more than less more is code to be of equals a Zero on the see prompt dot aye??,
should the ladder day planes spread to the Mind,
whatever is the evident to a tax tiles brain??,
the avenue or the bowl a shard??,
stabbing Pane buy a still??,
making laughter or being a Human Being in with a Crest!!


What than is Rush Limbaugh but a Tooth to a Shift,
stripping the gears to advance only sand,
yet on that Selmar would clarify a toy,
as that three wheeler is a Quatrain.



Instamatic

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Not to be confused with instant cameras, including Kodak's own Kodamatic line.
For the film formats associated with the Instamatic and Pocket Instamatic camera ranges, see 126 film and 110 film respectively.
The Instamatic 100, the first Instamatic sold in the US
Instamatic 404, with selenium meter-controlled aperture, Cooke triplet lens and spring wind
The Instamatic is a series of inexpensive, easy-to-load 126 and 110 cameras made by Kodak beginning in 1963.[1] The Instamatic was immensely successful, introducing a generation to low-cost photography and spawning numerous imitators.
During its heyday, the range was so ubiquitous that the Instamatic name is still frequently used (erroneously) to refer to any inexpensivepoint-and-shoot camera. (It is also frequently used incorrectly to describe Kodak's line of instant-picture cameras, the Kodamatic series.)
The Instamatic name was also used by Kodak on some Super 8-based home-cine cameras.[2]

History[edit]

Early Instamatics[edit]

The first Instamatics went on sale for $16 in early 1963.[3] They were the first cameras to use Kodak's new 126 format. The easy-load filmcartridge made the cameras very inexpensive to produce, as it provided the film backing plate and exposure counter itself and thus saved considerable design complexity and manufacturing cost for the cameras. A wide variety of print and slide film was sold by Kodak in the 126 format.
The lead designer for the Instamatic program was Dean M. Peterson, also later known for most of the innovations in the point-and-shoot camera revolution of the 1980s. The first Instamatic to be released was the Instamatic 50, which appeared in the UK in February 1963, about a month before the 100. The first model released in the US was the basic Instamatic 100. With fixed shutter speed of 1/90th of a second,[4] aperture and focus, it continued in the tradition of Kodak's earlier Brownie cameras, providing a simple snapshotcamera anyone could use. It also featured a built-in flashgun for AG-1 "peanut" bulbs, a feature lacking in the 50.
The lineup was soon expanded to include a variety of models from the basic but popular 100/104 to the automatic exposure 800/804, which featured an aluminum chassis,rangefinderselenium light meter, and clockwork spring wind. (The 100/104 designation refers to the type of flash: models ending in 0 had a built-in flashgun, while those ending in 4 used flashcubes.) The top-of-the-line model was the Instamatic Reflex SLR, which was made in Germany and could accept a variety of Retina S-mount lenses.

Commercial success[edit]

The Instamatic was an instant success; more than 50 million Instamatic cameras were produced between 1963 and 1970.[1] Kodak even gave away a considerable number in a joint promotion with Scott paper towels in the early 1970s in order to generate a large number of new photographers and stimulate lasting demand for its film business.
Many other manufacturers attempted to capitalize on the popularity of the Instamatic with their own 126 cameras, including CanonOlympusMinoltaRicohZeiss Ikon, and evenRollei. Some of these models were far more sophisticated and expensive than the Kodak cameras: the Rollei SL26, for instance, featured interchangeable lenses, TTL metering, and a rangefinder, and retailed for $300.
A new series of Instamatics was introduced in 1970 to take advantage of the new Magicube flash technology. Magicubes used mechanically triggered pyrotechnic detonators for each bulb, an improvement over flashcubes in that the need for batteries was eliminated. Instamatics with Magicube sockets were denoted by an "X" in the model number (e.g. X-15 or 55X).

"Pocket Instamatic" (110-format) [edit]

Kodak Pocket Instamatic using 110 film.
In 1972, Kodak introduced the Pocket Instamatic series for its new 110 format. The 110 cartridge had the same easy-load design as the 126 format but was much smaller, allowing the cameras to be very compact (hence the "Pocket" designation). The top-of-the-line model was the Pocket Instamatic 60, which featured a stainless steel body, rangefinder, and automatic exposure. More than 25 million Pocket Instamatics were produced in under three years, and the 110 format remained popular into the 1990s. However the small negative size limited quality when using the film emulsion of the period, although in practice most prints were small so this was not as apparent until they were 'blown up' to a larger size.

Mid-1970s to late 1980s[edit]

In 1976, the Instamatic X line was updated for use with the new Flipflash system. These cameras were designated by the addition of the suffix "F" to the model number of the corresponding Magicube model. The basic X-15F was the last Instamatic sold in the United States, remaining on sale until 1988.

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