Kodak Brownie's (8x) Analogue camera





| €2 |
|---|
Catawiki Buyer Protection
Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details
Trustpilot 4.4 | 128679 reviews
Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.
Kodak Brownie's (8x) camera in good physical condition, not tested for functionality, dating from the 1930s to the 1960s.
Description from the seller
==== Kodak Baby Brownie (2x) ====
The tiny Baby Brownie camera has a moulded plastic body designed by Walter Dorwin Teague and has a simple folding frame finder for lining up the subject. The US made Baby Brownies, destined for export from 1936-1939, had a button for brief time exposures (the one with the blank metal view finder). Kodak UK Limited manufactured this camera for export only after World War II with the brief time button added only to these models from 1951 until it was discontinued in 1952.
==== Kodak Baby Brownie Special ====
The Baby Brownie Special camera has a moulded plastic body with a direct vision optical finder. The models for export had a button allowing brief time exposures.
==== Kodak Brownie 127 (4x) ====
- 1952-1955 model
- 1956-1959 model
- 1959-1963 Second Model with white knobs
- 1959-1963 Second Model with grey knobs
The Brownie 127 has a moulded smooth plastic body with broad horizontal steps and an optical direct vision finder.
Variations:
1952-1955: The first Brownie 127 camera had a plain lens face-plate.
1956-1959: The original plain lens face-plate was replaced with a cross-hatched face-plate.
The Brownie 127, second model has a moulded plastic body with vertical ribbing, a smooth top, and an optical direct vision finder. It has a horizontally striped lens faceplate along with the name "Brownie" in quotation marks.
==== Kodak Brownie 44A ====
The Brownie 44A, with a black moulded plastic body, grey "sculptured" top, and a fabric covered aluminum back, was designed by Kenneth Grange. This "modern" and intellegently functional camera features an intregal flexible plastic ever-ready cover, an optical direct vision finder, and pin and screw flash contacts for an optional flash attachment.
This is the 1959-1964 model with Dakon lens and two apetures EV12(f/11) + EV13(f/16)
==== Kodak Baby Brownie (2x) ====
The tiny Baby Brownie camera has a moulded plastic body designed by Walter Dorwin Teague and has a simple folding frame finder for lining up the subject. The US made Baby Brownies, destined for export from 1936-1939, had a button for brief time exposures (the one with the blank metal view finder). Kodak UK Limited manufactured this camera for export only after World War II with the brief time button added only to these models from 1951 until it was discontinued in 1952.
==== Kodak Baby Brownie Special ====
The Baby Brownie Special camera has a moulded plastic body with a direct vision optical finder. The models for export had a button allowing brief time exposures.
==== Kodak Brownie 127 (4x) ====
- 1952-1955 model
- 1956-1959 model
- 1959-1963 Second Model with white knobs
- 1959-1963 Second Model with grey knobs
The Brownie 127 has a moulded smooth plastic body with broad horizontal steps and an optical direct vision finder.
Variations:
1952-1955: The first Brownie 127 camera had a plain lens face-plate.
1956-1959: The original plain lens face-plate was replaced with a cross-hatched face-plate.
The Brownie 127, second model has a moulded plastic body with vertical ribbing, a smooth top, and an optical direct vision finder. It has a horizontally striped lens faceplate along with the name "Brownie" in quotation marks.
==== Kodak Brownie 44A ====
The Brownie 44A, with a black moulded plastic body, grey "sculptured" top, and a fabric covered aluminum back, was designed by Kenneth Grange. This "modern" and intellegently functional camera features an intregal flexible plastic ever-ready cover, an optical direct vision finder, and pin and screw flash contacts for an optional flash attachment.
This is the 1959-1964 model with Dakon lens and two apetures EV12(f/11) + EV13(f/16)

