An old camera from the 1950s. Very small. The lens collapses into the body which is convenient, but the aperture control is this little flange next to the front element that you operate with your finger nail, hopefully without putting a fingerprint on the lens. The camera has nicely finished controls, but to focus it you use a separate viewfinder window, which in turn needs its own focus, depending on the distance of the subject. The true viewfinder is really small and not much good, so they offer an accessory viewfinder, but you have to change that for different focal length lenses. The shutter speed dial is not a dial but two separate dials. Below 1/25s you dial up the speed on a new rotating dial plastered to the front of the camera. Loading this camera is a complete pain. You have to trim the leader so it's shallow across the film gate and you can't see the film going into place as there is only this opening at the bottom of the camera. The baseplate on the model I have has a flat post for guiding the film into the right level when you close up the camera. The daftest element of this camera is the baseplate tripod bush, way up one end. Some foreign brand, Leica. I presume it never caught on.