'Le Phoebus 1870
Etienne Carjat (1828–1906) addition French columnist created "le Phobus'" about the backward 1870s. It was a simple amber box camera. It bare no academic shutter. The accoutrement lenscap was removed and replaced for the acknowledgment of light.4
Pocket Kodak 1895–1896
Pocket Kodaks were baby (2 and 3/16 x 3 x 4 inches) and failing (6 ounces), and took almost 2 inch exposures on 102 admeasurement rollfilm. This camera had a new feature, a baby appearance box that told how abounding exposures of blur were left. They were aboriginal accessible in 1895 with either atramentous or red accoutrement covering.5
le Papillon 1905–1908
Meaning "the butterfly," le Papillon was a baby French stereo camera which fabricated 45mm x 107mm stereoscopic images on bottle plates in individual plateholders.6
No. 00 Cartridge Premo Camera, 1916–1922
The No. 00 Cartridge Premo was Kodak's aboriginal box camera ever. It was alone 2½ inches tall. It uses a simple rotary bang with meniscus lens, and does not accept a viewfinder. The columnist have to use the leatherette accoutrement to attack to see the accountable of the photograph.7
Etienne Carjat (1828–1906) addition French columnist created "le Phobus'" about the backward 1870s. It was a simple amber box camera. It bare no academic shutter. The accoutrement lenscap was removed and replaced for the acknowledgment of light.4
Pocket Kodak 1895–1896
Pocket Kodaks were baby (2 and 3/16 x 3 x 4 inches) and failing (6 ounces), and took almost 2 inch exposures on 102 admeasurement rollfilm. This camera had a new feature, a baby appearance box that told how abounding exposures of blur were left. They were aboriginal accessible in 1895 with either atramentous or red accoutrement covering.5
le Papillon 1905–1908
Meaning "the butterfly," le Papillon was a baby French stereo camera which fabricated 45mm x 107mm stereoscopic images on bottle plates in individual plateholders.6
No. 00 Cartridge Premo Camera, 1916–1922
The No. 00 Cartridge Premo was Kodak's aboriginal box camera ever. It was alone 2½ inches tall. It uses a simple rotary bang with meniscus lens, and does not accept a viewfinder. The columnist have to use the leatherette accoutrement to attack to see the accountable of the photograph.7
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