What was your very own first camera?

What was your very own first camera?

  • Leica

    Votes: 25 2.2%
  • Kodak

    Votes: 228 20.2%
  • Canon

    Votes: 156 13.8%
  • Nikon

    Votes: 132 11.7%
  • Agfa

    Votes: 24 2.1%
  • Pentax

    Votes: 97 8.6%
  • Olympus

    Votes: 66 5.9%
  • Contax

    Votes: 8 0.7%
  • Another - too many to list all so please tell us

    Votes: 392 34.8%

  • Total voters
    1,128
I started with a Brownie Holiday 127 which I took to the NY World's Fair. It was handed down from my sister.

My first new one was a Brownie Auto 127. Its electric eye made it much more desirable than the basic Instamatic that just came out.
 
I was given a Kodak Brownie 127 for my 8th birthday. That would have been in 1952. I still have it. I just saw that Freestyle has ReraPan 100 ISO in 127 Size. I'll probably give it a try.
 
My first own camera was in about 1982 a Yashica Partner. 38mm f/4, fix focus, the meter can be set either for AS100 or 400, the aperture has four fixed positions.
 
The classic... Kodak Instamatic and it was probably around 1972... it's long gone but it was a great deal of fun to use as a kid !!

Cheers,
Dave
 
An awful Minolta SR-1 with an eyepiee that scratched your eyelids and a lightmeter (which I still have) that didn't work because "someone" had decided to stuff Play-Doh into it ;)

Next one was an even worse Kodak Disc 4000...
 
Ok, I'll play, too. My first real camera, the first I actually owned, was a Nikon FG-20. Still have it, after 25 years. I had it checked and refoamed eight years ago or so, a few years later the electronics went belly-up. Can't say I didn't get my money's worth out of it!

Greetings, Ljós
 
impressed that Kodak is leading!
and actually my first one also was a Kodak, a Pocket Instamatic 100. Had forgotten all about it, and had voted 'other', for the Minolta XG1 with MD 1.4/50 lens that I bought new when I was 17.
 
...My very first camera was a little plastic job, along the lines of a box camera, with a crude eye-level finder that was mail-ordered with a dollar and cereal box tops. I was five or six years old.....

- Murray

Same here. I wonder if it was the same type as the one I got.

The funny thing is, my mother, the skeptic, said they would never send the camera, but they did, and I still have a few photos taken with it, plus I have a hand-drawn sketch of the camera in my old cub scout scrap book.

Do you still have the camera? Mine is long gone, but I am 99% sure it was a Herco Imperial, possibly re-branded, so I bought another one on ebay, just for old times sake.
 
Welcome to RFF, Alan (?).

Mine is long gone, too. I think it said "Adventure 620," or something like that, on the front under the lens. I remember it in detail and I wish I still had it. I still have the "flash camera" - a Kodak Duaflex IV - that I got for Christmas a couple of years later.

- Murray
 
Back then in 1975, a (used) Rolleiflex SL35 with 35mm and 85mm Zeiss lenses- great optics and OK-ish camera.
Cost was 1000 SEK =110 eur (but normal Swedish salaries were about 400 eur...)
Served me well for many years, had the lenses repaired in 2001 and a few years later all was stolen together with other important stuff...

Today, 2 Pentax LX bodies with some 10 smc lenses, so, no remorse at all, RIP Rollei, and thanks for those happy days.
 
mamiya zm

mamiya zm

My first camera i owned was a Mamiya zm with a sekor f1.7 50mm until it was destroyed in a accident .:mad:
 
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