Camera and Coffee

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.
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.
 
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.

We are all madly curious about the other cameras in that bag.

Come on, don't keep us in suspense!! (please)
 
We are all madly curious about the other cameras in that bag.

Come on, don't keep us in suspense!! (please)
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.

BG7P4062 S2 by Jeri Leibovits, on Flickr

**
 
I've joined the monochrome club.
_DSC7321.jpg
(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:
prints.jpg
 
Last edited:
I've joined the monochrome club.
View attachment 4849331
(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:
View attachment 4849332
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...
 
Back
Top Bottom