Box Camera Kodak, 'Brownie', 'Six16', Toronto, Canada, 1930s


Target Brownie Six16, free photo files, 1559672

Description: Six-16 Brownies are made with a leatherette covered metal box. The front panel has a distinctive geometric Art Deco design. It features a close-up lens, a slide on top of the camera for a smaller f/stop and a slide above the shutter release for time exposures. It has two brilliant finders for taking horizontal or vertical pictures.


Target BROWNIE Six16 Camera Includes Photo The Kodak Camera List

New Listing Vintage Kodak Brownie Junior Six 16 Box Camera Antique Art Deco Decor Prop AS IS. $13.96. Was: $19.95 was - US $19.95. $13.95 shipping. Sponsored Sponsored Ad. 2 Vintage Kodak Six-16 Brownie Special cameras (U34686) $6.66. $10.00 shipping. 2 bids. 4d 15h. Two Vintage Kodak Brownie Target Six-16 Box Camera. $0.99.


Antique Target BROWNIE Six16 Camera (19381942) USA

The Kodak Brownie Six-16 camera was manufactured in USA from 1933 until 1941 when production stopped 83 years ago. The Brownie Six-16 was designed to take 616, Roll film. Initially priced at $3.50, the Brownie Six-16 would cost $61.25 in 2011.


VC003 Kodak Target Brownie Six16 Camera Prop Rental ACME Brooklyn

Kodak's Six-16 Brownie Junior is a camera for 616 film.It has similar appearance to the Kodak Six-20 Brownie Junior.It was sold from 1934 to 1942, was made in the US, and the original price was $2.75, which adjusted for inflation is $48.64 in 2015 money (per CPI Inflation Calculator). 616 film was discontinued in 1984, though there are modern solutions for those who wish to use 616 cameras in.


Box Camera Kodak, 'Brownie', 'Six16', Toronto, Canada, 1930s

The Kodak Brownie Target Six-16 is a box-type camera from the 1940s. It is based on the Kodak Target Six-20 which was produced starting 1941. The facade has a strong symmetrical geometric pattern echoing the 'Kodak Girl' stripe. The body is metal and covered in leatherette. It has two reflecting brilliant finders.


Kodak Brownie Target Six16 FlynnGraphics

Information page about the BROWNIE Target Six-16 Camera. It was produced from 1946 until 1951. The original price was 4. This camera uses 616 format film. | The Kodak List.


Vintage Camera Collection Target Brownie Six20 and Six16

Description: This camera is made with a metal box body and handles wear and tear very well. It features 2 brilliant viewfinders, a bulb (time) setting and has an additional slide-in f/stop (f/11 and f/16). It is decorated with an art deco vertical line design on the front panel. This camera was developed from the Target Brownie Six-16 .


Six16 Brownie Junior Free Photo Download FreeImages

The Target Brownie was manufactured by Eastman Kodak Company from 1941 to 1946. A simple box camera with horizontal and vertical view finders that show magnified images.. The Six-16 camera produced eight 2 1/4 x 3 1/4 inch black and white exposures or six 2 7/8 x 4 3/16 inch Kodacolor pictures on no. 616 roll film. The camera measured.


Kodak Brownie Folding Six16 Catawiki

2d 21h. Brownie Junior Six-16 Vintage Kodak Film Camera. Vintage Film Camera. C $18.75. Was: C $25.00. or Best Offer. C $37.54 shipping. 2 watching.


Kodak Brownie Special Six16, Rochester, U.S.A., circa 1940 Camera

navigation search. Kodak Six-16 Brownie Special. image by Rick Soloway ( Image rights) Designed by Walter Dorwin Teague, this large box camera for film size 616 was manufactured by Kodak in the United States between 1938 and 1942. It has a characteristic trapezoidal shape, made sturdily from metal. It was a larger version of the Kodak Six-20.


Kodak Brownie Target Six16 Box Camera

The Brownie Target Six-16 was produced in the USA between 1941 and 1951. It came with a number of art deco faceplate. The camera is interesting because of how large it is and its unusual film size. After producing no new film sizes for 16 years Kodak introduced two relatively short lived film sizes in 1932. These were the 620 and 616 which were.


Kodak Target Brownie Six16 Six20 Catawiki

The Six-16 Brownie Junior camera was very popular. This rather large box Brownie produced a large "postcard" size negative perfect for contact printing. Cameras like the Six-16 Brownie Junior are the continuation of large but portable box cameras that helped put the "Postcard Photographers" of early-day resorts, like Coney Island and Atlantic.


Vintage Kodak Brownie Six16 Camera/Target Six16/Circa Etsy

This is a Brownie Target 616 made by Eastman Kodak somewhere between 1946 and 1951. This was the very first camera I ever bought. This was the very first camera I ever bought. I paid 25¢ for it when I was eight years old from a now-defunct junk shop in Garbage Grove, California.


Kodak Six16 Brownie Junior Made in Canada , 19341942 . F… Flickr

The Kodak Target Brownie Six-16 was a box camera made by Kodak. It uses 616 film. It was produced from 1941 to 1946. It has a slide at the top you can pull up to take pictures in bright sun, f/16. For lower light situations, leave the slide flush along the top of the camera for f/11.


Vintage Kodak Target Brownie Six 16 Black by TheBrownSuitcase

The Specs. The Kodak Brownie Target Six-16 has a fixed lens, so you have to be at least 8ft away from your subject, unless you have a close up attachment. Just like the Target Six-20, it also has a time switch and a slide at the top to switch between an aperture of f/11 and f/16. 616 film creates negatives of 2.5 by 4.25 inches.


Kodak Brownie Target Six16 Catawiki

The Six-16 Brownie Special camera was a popular camera designed by Walter Dorwin Teague. It is an all metal camera which is virtually indestructable compared to its Bakelite counterparts. It is wedge shaped and has a curved film plane. The curved film plane reduces vignetting and barrel distortion normally associated with a simple meniscus lens.