That Pen has seen some things!
The specific camera was purchased in the sixties of the last century, during a concert tour in Japan, by Mrs. Miriam Boskovich, a talented and gifted pianist (Miriam recently celebrated her hundredth birthday). I can assume that Mrs. Boskovich made quite a bit of use of her Olympus Pen camera W. About a dozen years ago, during a visit to Miriam, whose daughter I have been friends with for many years, she handed me a shopping bag with several cameras in it. 'You will find a better use for them than me,' said Miriam with a warm smile.That Pen has seen some things!
Pentax Espio Mini
Its the Moccamaster one cup, I use my Sage Perfect Brew if I am making more than one cup and the Moccamaster if I am brewing just one cup. The 'one cup' is a relatively new variant of the original Moccamaster.Moccamaster? I don't recognize the small "plate" on the base.
The specific camera was purchased in the sixties of the last century, during a concert tour in Japan, by Mrs. Miriam Boskovich, a talented and gifted pianist (Miriam recently celebrated her hundredth birthday). I can assume that Mrs. Boskovich made quite a bit of use of her Olympus Pen camera W. About a dozen years ago, during a visit to Miriam, whose daughter I have been friends with for many years, she handed me a shopping bag with several cameras in it. 'You will find a better use for them than me,' said Miriam with a warm smile.
As mentioned, one of the cameras that Miriam packed inside the shopping bag was the Olympus Pen W that appears in the photo I took yesterday.
Nothing special to tell about it. But since you are curious, I will tell you that in the shopping bag Mrs. Boskovich gave me, I discovered a Pentax KM camera, two Russian cameras from the Soviet Union era. and another one that was made in Italy; A camera made of bakelite for 126 roll film, with a Bauhaus style design. As mentioned, the former Soviet cameras were the Zorki 4, and the Kyiv-4, and already that evening, when I was sitting in a bar not far from Mrs. Boskovich's residence, I passed them on to an interested photographer friend, who promised me to find them a warm home. I passed the Pentax KM on to a friend whose daughter was interested in analog photography. The Bauhaus-designed 126 camera was moved to my parents' house, where it found a resting place on the bookcase shelf in my father's study. I kept the Olympus Pen W camera for myself. Not only because of its rarity I keep it, but also because of its attribution to the celebrated pianist Mrs. Boskovich. But between us, how can a person even think of releasing such a camera, which is a piece of history from a world that was and is no more.We are all madly curious about the other cameras in that bag.
Come on, don't keep us in suspense!! (please)
I need to know what's in the beaker?
Both the Pentax 17 and the ceramic crab are what is often called "ugly cute."The ceramic piece is what's known as a "tea pet".
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Very interesting! This has potential for lots of fun, and some serious stuff too. Can you tell us more about this camera, particularly what it's called? It looks like a candidate for cheap GAS, the best kind...I've joined the monochrome club.
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(for those of you not familiar with the things, it's a Chinese digital camera for kids. A built-in thermal printer produces super cheap b&w prints on the sort of paper normally used for cash register receipts)
And scans of some of the prints, at about 1-1/2 times life size:
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