Difference between revisions of "No. 4A Folding Kodak"

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'''The No. 4A Folding Kodak''' was [[Kodak | Kodak's]] largest conventional-style rollfilm camera. Introduced in 1906,<REF name="Coe">{{Coe Kodak}} p.92-94.</REF>  it made six 4¼ x 6½-inch exposures on [[126 film (roll)|No.126 rollfilm.]] The first model had a wooden front standard, later models (from 1907) had a metal front. An accessory back was available for exposures onto plates. Coe<REF name="Coe"/> lists numerous variations in lenses and shutters. It was discontinued in 1915.
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'''The No. 4A Folding Kodak''' was [[Kodak | Kodak's]] largest conventional-style rollfilm camera. Introduced in 1906,<REF name="Coe">{{Coe Kodak}} p.92-94.</REF>  it made six 4¼ x 6½-inch exposures on [[126 film (roll)|No.126 rollfilm.]] The first model has a wooden front standard, later models (from 1907) have a metal front. An accessory back was available for exposures onto plates. Coe<REF name="Coe"/> lists numerous variations in lenses and shutters. It was discontinued in 1915.
  
  

Revision as of 11:03, 16 December 2018

The No. 4A Folding Kodak was Kodak's largest conventional-style rollfilm camera. Introduced in 1906,[1] it made six 4¼ x 6½-inch exposures on No.126 rollfilm. The first model has a wooden front standard, later models (from 1907) have a metal front. An accessory back was available for exposures onto plates. Coe[1] lists numerous variations in lenses and shutters. It was discontinued in 1915.




Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Coe, Brian: Kodak Cameras, the First Hundred Years; Hove Foto Books, Hove, UK. 1988; ISBN 0-906447-44-5, or 2nd edition, 2003; ISBN 1874707375. p.92-94.