Journey with me down camera memory lane...

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I was musing today how far I’ve come in photography since I first started taking pictures.

Interestingly, I was able to find some photos of the various cameras I’ve owned over the years, and arrange them in chronological order. In a way, this exercise down memory lane in reality has traced the history of photography to a large extent, from about 1949 to the present.

First, here’s a picture of me taken about 1949 with my very first camera. It was a real beauty; the famous Donald Duck Camera. Please excuse the fuzziness of the photo – my dad was then using a 1930s-vintage fold-out bellows Kodak.

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Here’s some modern-day pictures, taken by others of that camera in some detail.

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It used roll film, had a fixed lens, and you advanced the film until a new number showed in a round red-screened hole in the back of the camera.

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In doing some research, I discovered that this little camera could be obtained from Sears, Roebuck from 1946 on for the grand sum of $2.98! Here’s an ad from that era:

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Well, I used that camera for a while, but I was starting to get a lotta laughs from a lotta folks whenever I proudly showed it off. By 1953, I had become the owner of a REAL camera, a genuine Ansco Shur Shot box camera. To use, you held it against your belly for stability, framed your shot in a little window (there were 2, one for horizontal and one for vertical), and gently pressed the red shutter lever. The lens was fixed, as was the exposure. No control other than you had to have some daylight to take a picture.

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Well, that camera served me for 5 or six years. It was my mainstay in high school, and I took lots of shots of my high school sweetheart with it. I had picked her out of the herd pretty early, and eventually she asked me to marry her!

My dad had been using an old Bolsey 35mm camera by that time, and then when he acquired a deluxe Leica IIIF for serious work, he let me use it. Here’s a picture of it. Everything was manual, but you could adjust the focus, the exposure time, and the aperture. Armed with that and a cheap exposure meter, I was in business with a much more sophisticated camera. I started to use it while in college.

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Just for reference, here is picture of my dad’s Leica. He occasionally let me use it – it was state of the art in the mid- to late 1950s. It had 3 interchangeable lenses, a “wide angle” 35mm, a standard 50mm, and a “telephoto” 135mm. It had a gizmo on the top that you could aim it with. It was adjustable for parallax and for the specific lens used. Leica lenses were then renowned for clarity – and they still are today. When my dad passed in 1987, I inherited this camera and had it refurbished, as the silk screen shutter had developed some holes.

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As a point of information, here’s something about the Leica company in Germany that you might not have known:
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Well, that old Bolsey served me fairly well until the mid-1980s. I felt somewhat handicapped in that I didn’t have a single-lens reflex camera that allowed you to frame the picture through the camera’s lens. At K-Mart one day, they had a sale on the Pentax K1000. It wasn’t fancy, but it had interchangeable lens capability, and a built in “match the needle” light meter. It was manual everything, including focus, but it worked splendidly. It was my mainstay camera for years, and I really got serious about photography with it.

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Around 2005, a revolution was taking place. Digital photography. I was a bit hesitant to take the jump, but I decided to buy an inexpensive Kodak point-and-shoot to experience this new technology in 2005. This was the Kodak CX6445 Zoom. It was capable of all of 4 megapixels (whatever they were). It produced .JPG-format photos and you could save them on a memory card. Initially, to process them into actual hold-in-your-hand photos, I took the memory card to the drug store and let them process them and put them on a compact disk for storage. I no longer have this camera, but here’s a picture of it, taken off the internet:

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I soon discovered that I could process the images on my own computer with the proper software, and I really missed having a more sophisticated single lens reflex camera. That’s when my love affair with Pentax started – they were offering a relatively inexpensive digital SLR in 2007 that gave me a 50% jump in megapixels – six of them! Boy, I bought it in a flash – it was a return to the control of the old K-1000, but with the ease of digital technology. It came equipped with an 18-55mm zoom lens. Automatic focus, and either automatic or full manual control. Here is the K100D:

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All things bear improvement, and Pentax came up with a new one in 2009. TWELVE megapixels, and faster everything. The lenses I had for all my older Pentax cameras would fit and work – why not? Enter the K200D. I gave my K100D to a granddaughter who was getting interested in photography, and it’s served her well. My 200D became my new workhorse as I retired and became a freelance writer/photographer. Here it is:

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Technology marches on. In August of 2011, my wife and I celebrated our 50th wedding anniversary with a two-week trip to Hawaii. The new Pentax K-5 had just come on stream, with an amazing 16 megapixels – It had features I was itching to use on the trip, and believe me, I think I photographed everything in Hawaii with it. I had a new 18-135 zoom lens that was moisture resistant, as was the camera. Perfect for Hawaii, and I did not have to change lenses for the whole trip. Marvelous. The K-5 was indeed state-of-the-art in 2011, and I reveled in using it.

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In 2013, Pentax introduced the 24 megapixel K-3, which became the new company flagship. It was a dream, and enabled me to do things photographically I could never do before. The older K-5 quickly became my backup camera. Here’s the K-3, with so many features I can’t address them here without writing a book.

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So now I’m completely happy with my equipment. The K-3 and seven lenses to accomplish everything I could imagine photographically… including photographing guns and posting the pictures here!

But Pentax has just introduced the K-1 full-frame digital SLR as its new flagship – it has 36 megapixels! Think of the HUGE pictures I could generate with that…

Ah well. I think I’ll take a breather before I take that jump. It’s been fun to review all the cameras I’ve used over the years, from Donald Duck to hell-for-leather digital SLRs. More than probably, some of you have also experienced the revolution in photography over the past 20 years. It would be interesting to see what you’ve used!

John
 
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I have a Canon 70D 20.2mp. With the larger size you have to resize everything before sharing online. I could shoot smaller sizes with it but I like the flexibility of the larger images. Software lets you do so much with digital photos.
 
I'm just a hack when it comes to photography. Once considered myself a serious hobbyist, but those days are past. I do have a pair of Sony DSLRs, an old A200 and a newer A57, along with a Pentax superzoom and a really old Pentax 35mm ME Super that still works after 40 years, but I rarely use that now.
 
2005? My first digicam was from 1999.
I do remember those "easyshare" cameras that required an annoying dock to transfer the pictures
 
I still have my Pentax K1000. Mine is the SE version, not sure what the SE adds. I have a 28mm wide angle, 50mm, and 80-200mm zoom lenses. The 28mm is my favorite lens.

My favorite film was the old 64 speed Kodachrome slide film.
 
Nice retrospective. I thought for sure you were leading up to a medium format camera.
 
We had similar camera past's. I can't remember the names, but my first was a 127 roll film, with a built in flash, using the mini bulbs. I progresses to an Instamatic using flash cubes. While overseas in the military I found an Edixa, probably close to your Bosley in controls. I did learn how to make an exposure. Then came the Edixa Model D, SLR with (pentax) screw mount lenses. WOW, I had a 35, 50 (1.9) 135, and a preset 400mm. That all got left behind for a Nikon F which I carried back to the US, along with the Rolleiflex f2.8 (Planar lens). That was a camera. After getting married, and children coming along, I needed money and these went. Later I started all over with a Mamiya SLR, and then back to a Nikon F2 (which I still have) and a variety of lenses. They sit on the shelf now and the Cannon Powershot S2 IS (5 MP) did a great job on our first retirement trip to Italy. That was supplemented with a Cannon Powershot A1100 IS (12.1 MP) which is actually a shirt pocket camera and does a remarkable job. Just attended my Granddaughters college graduation and took about 50 pictures, on my cell phone.

From having my own darkroom, to doing a few weddings and some industrial photography, to using a cell phone for a camera, I guess my interest level just isn't up there any longer.
 
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I started out with the Olympus in the center. Every bit of 1.3 mp and could store up to 56 pictures. It was state of the art back in the day.
For my video channel, I got the white Samsung HMX-F90.
Then my old Olympus quit working.
So I replaced it with the red Samsung WB35F. 16.2 mp. It also takes video and travels with me as my travel camera.
The one on the bottom's an SJ4000 action cam. It's in a waterproof housing. That one goes hiking, biking and also travels with us as a windshield cam.
 
I started out during my early grade school years with a Baby Brownie, 127 film, I used it a lot. In my mid teens, I got a Kodak Signet 40 (35mm), and used it for a LONG time, until the early 1980's when the shutter jammed up and couldn't be fixed. I hated to throw it away. It was a wonderful camera, but you had to limit yourself to a f/3.5 45mm lens (at least I think it was a 45mm). It had variable shutter speeds up to 1/400 (I think) and a coupled rangefinder. No exposure meter, but I didn't really need one. I had a pretty good eye for light.

By the time I sold off all my film cameras (I had lots of them), they were virtually worthless, even the Nikons, Canons, and Olympus. The one exception was a nearly new-condition Rollei 2.8F, which I made a fair profit on several years ago.
 
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I started with Kodak Instamatics when I was about 13 and have kept up with it ever since. My first 35mm was a Pentax with the exposure needle. These days I have a pair of Canon 50D's. One has a 18-135mm on it and the other a 100-400mm. Nature photography is my favorite. We recently have had a couple of Mississippi kites hanging around our neighborhood. The first time we have seen them this close to home.



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I'll add another of my favorites from a local park not far from us.



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Nice story and pics of your old cameras.

When a thing in Viet Nam was happening a few enterprising GI's would buy Rolex real ones watches and Yashika cameras and other valuuables on the black market, stuff them in their duffell bags and sell them back home. I bought a Yashika professional 35 MM Box camera, NIB for $25.00. I could have bought a Rolex for the same amount, what was I thinking?

I took lots of pics with the Yashica, It was more of a studio portrait type. A friend had one, he opened a photography studio and bought mine for a back up. I think he offered me a hundred.

I used a German 35mm for many years before that.

I had a pentax after the Yashica.

New we have a 10 year old 35 MM with a big lens assortment and a also a new digital camera.

For you old film lovers the last of the Kodak chemicals were used last year.

DeWaynes photograpy in PArsons, KS years ago had bought up the last from Kodak. Many services sent their film there to get it developed, now Kadachrome developing is no more, it went down the road with Oldmobile, Desoto, Plymouth and Pontiac.....
 
For you Pentax owners, Pentax made the jump to digital bodies years back, and the early models can be found quite cheap. The great thing is even the newest Pentax digital will still use the same lenses your old film unit has. Smart thinking on the part of Pentax and one of their major selling points.
 
For you Pentax owners, Pentax made the jump to digital bodies years back, and the early models can be found quite cheap. The great thing is even the newest Pentax digital will still use the same lenses your old film unit has. Smart thinking on the part of Pentax and one of their major selling points.

Does Pentax make a DSLR with a full size CCD that can use the old lenses? I looked a while back, the CCD was the smaller size. Compared to a film camera body, the same lens on a digital is zoomed in.

Of course the old lenses will be 100% manual adjust.
 
I have sold or given away all of my film cameras and darkroom equipment (except for a Canon EOS 650, which I will probably never use again, but I kept just because I liked it). I lost lots of money on all that equipment. About all I use now are small digital point and shoot cameras, of which I have an accumulation of six. One of my favorites is my first digital camera, a Kodak 3 MP with a fixed focal length lens, which I bought around 1992. Still works fine and takes great pictures even with the low (for today) sensor resolution. They do everything I need done. I thought about getting a Canon digital SLR body so I could use all those Canon lenses, but decided I would never use it if I had it. At my age small and light cameras are better. I have never used the camera feature on my cel phone. Maybe I should try it, seems that everyone else does.

BTW, one of the reasons I like that old 1992 Kodak digital camera is because it has a feature I consider valuable - an optical viewfinder. None of the others do, just the flat screen, That's OK, but the optical finder is much better on a bright day outside.
 
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Does Pentax make a DSLR with a full size CCD that can use the old lenses? I looked a while back, the CCD was the smaller size. Compared to a film camera body, the same lens on a digital is zoomed in.

Of course the old lenses will be 100% manual adjust.

The answer to your question is YES! Pentax has just introduced the K-1 - full frame CCD, 36mp DSLR camera. It will use any of the old 35mm Pentax film lenses (even screw mounts with an adapter), and the newer ones designed for an APS-C CCD. As mentioned here, one of Pentax's strong points has always been that legacy lens capability. The APS-C lenses will not fill the full frame, but the pictures can be cropped in post-processing, or with a control on the camera itself. It's a bit pricey, designed for advanced amateurs or professionals. I'm waiting until the price inevitably comes down; for now I'm very happy with my K-3.

John
 
The answer to your question is YES! Pentax has just introduced the K-1 - full frame CCD, 36mp DSLR camera. It will use any of the old 35mm Pentax film lenses (even screw mounts with an adapter), and the newer ones designed for an APS-C CCD. As mentioned here, one of Pentax's strong points has always been that legacy lens capability. The APS-C lenses will not fill the full frame, but the pictures can be cropped in post-processing, or with a control on the camera itself. It's a bit pricey, designed for advanced amateurs or professionals. I'm waiting until the price inevitably comes down; for now I'm very happy with my K-3.

John
You are right about the price, but when compared to other companies full frame cameras with the same features, it's actually a bargain.


Says the guy who has one. ;)
 
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