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Your search "instamatic" resulted in 5 Articles

  • My Analogue Childhood

    My Analogue Childhood
    I recently rediscovered analogue photography and this is the story of the camera that started it all. Not the camera that helped me re discover photography but the camera that helped me discover it in the 1st place, and how it will always be inextricably linked with my childhood.
  • Reload Your Old 126 Films with Fresh 35mm Film

    Reload Your Old 126 Films with Fresh 35mm Film
    If you finally got a 126 roll, don't stop reloading it with your favorite 35 mm film and use it with your Agfamatic or Kodak Instamatic camera!!
  • KODAK Instamatic 25

    KODAK Instamatic 25
    My first camera. It was July 25, 1977 …: it seems that it was yesterday! This day I receive my first camera. It was ugly, quite ugly, and it was using a cartridge with the movie. I believe (believe no: I´m sure) that in the first spool that I used with this camera, there was not even only one photo that was not going out blurred:!! In this way everything began …
  • Saint Cyprien Plage

    Saint Cyprien Plage
    Last year I was living in Toulouse in the south west of France. With friends we decided to go by the sea on a shinny Sunday, and the road lead us to Saint Cyprien, near Perpignan.
  • Kodak Instamatic 33

    Kodak Instamatic 33
    The Kodak Instamatic Camera is a camera which was developed in the 1960s to simplify the use of film. The idea was to put in and out a film without any problems because the insertion of normal film often caused troubles. Even professional photographers did it wrong sometimes so that a whole series of their photos was destroyed. So Kodak developed the cassette film (126 film) a rather cheap alternative to usual film at this time, and the above mentioned Instamatic camera. You just have to insert the cassette into the camera – the film transport starts when you turn the film transportation wheel. There is only one producer who still builds 126 films: the Italian company Ferrania. The trade name of the film is Solaris. The format is square and it has 24 exposures. They don’t produce black and white film or slide film anymore.