I'm not sure I could say that
one camera did it. Rather, my interest in photography developed through several cameras, from child to adult, and I could say that said interest was
set through a certain camera.
I wanted a camera when I was pretty young. My first camera, when I was maybe five or six years of age, was an
Adventurer 620.
A friend of the family had ordered several, for a dollar each and requisite box-tops, and she had an extra.
Next, I wanted a camera with flash, so I got a
Kodak Duaflex IV TLR for Christmas in 1959 (I had recently turned eight).
I got to take a photography course in summer school, in 1961, and that was great!
At the university, my sophomore year, I wanted a camera to take photos of friends and such. For Christmas that year, I received a
Minolta Autopak 600 (for 126 film), which was a pretty amazing little camera. It had a coated 4-element glass lens (presumably a Tessar-type), zone focusing, and auto-exposure. The magic was when I realized that I could take slides with that camera that would fit in any 35mm projector. I started getting some interesting images.
Soon thereafter, I decided that I wanted to get a 35mm camera that offered more control. So that spring, I got a killer deal on a demo-model
Yashica TL-Super (basically a less expensive camera similar to a Pentax Spotmatic). Then things really took off.
- Murray