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  2. View-Master Personal Stereo Camera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/View-Master_Personal...

    The View-Master Personal Stereo Camera was a 35mm film camera designed to take 3D stereo photos for viewing in a View-Master.First released in 1952, the camera took 69 pairs of photos on a 36-exposure roll of 35mm film, taking one set while the film was unwound from the canister, and another set while it was rewound.

  3. iISO flash shoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IISO_flash_shoe

    iISO (intelligent ISO) flash shoe (aka "reversed" hotshoe) is the unofficial name for the proprietary accessory flash attachment and control interface used on Minolta cameras since the i-series introduced in 1988, and subsequently Konica Minolta and later Sony α DSLRs and NEX-7 up to 2012.

  4. Stereo Realist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereo_Realist

    The camera was held by a hand grip with a built-in shutter button and lighting was through an electronic flash unit sold with the camera. [4] The one missing feature that would have made it a truly convenient point-and-shoot was a motorized film advance, a rare feature indeed for cameras of that era.

  5. Kodak Pony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kodak_Pony

    While the initial version of this camera used paperbacked 828 film (as used in the Kodak Bantam cameras), the five later versions were adapted to use 35mm 135 film. The cameras were designed by Arthur H. Crapsey. [1] The Pony had a four-speed 'Flash 200' shutter, an Anaston 51 mm f/4.5 triplet lens, and a fitted leather case

  6. Yashica Electro 35 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yashica_Electro_35

    The Electro 35 is a rangefinder camera made by Japanese company Yashica from the mid-1960s with a coupled and fixed 1:1.7 45 mm lens. It was the first electronically controlled camera, operating mainly in an aperture priority 'auto' mode. The only other modes of operation are 'flash' (1/30) and 'bulb'.

  7. Contaflex SLR - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contaflex_SLR

    The Contaflex series is a family of 35mm Single-lens reflex cameras (SLR) equipped with a leaf shutter, produced by Zeiss Ikon in the 1950s and 1960s. The name was first used by Zeiss Ikon in 1935 for a 35mm Twin-lens reflex camera, the Contaflex TLR; for the earlier TLR, the -flex suffix referred to the integral reflex mirror for the viewfinder.

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