oldcamerasoldphotos
oldcamerasoldphotos
A collection and love of old cameras & old photos
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 1 year ago
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Bum! ❤️ Photo from my collection, 1936.
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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Love you, Butch
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It’s Butch! Photo from my collection, ca. 1950s.
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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Love these! So vibrant and fun!
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1990s Crayola kids cameras 🌈
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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Haven't seen this shape before!
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They’re multiplying…
One on the right is the one I restored.
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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Film in this polaroid (though the battery is dead) and an unopened pack! Surprise gift for me. 10 pictures per film pack, don't shake it!
Made in the early 1990's, this is another great instant camera but made for close ups and selfies. It opens and closes easily, though this can get a bit stuck after sitting for awhile.
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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Rare Historical Photos of The Los Angeles flood of 1938
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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Takashima Aiko 高島愛子
An actress, model and moga. Born 1904 and died, in a firebombing raid on Tokyo, in 1945. She played Teruko in one of Mizoguchi Kenji’s silent films of 1925, Out of College 学窓を出でて.
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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I love it. Extremely.
Test: Polaroid 600 extreme
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View On WordPress
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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The Loomis Radio School, Washington D.C. ca. 1921.
The school was located at 401 Ninth St. N.W. and operated with the call letters 3YA. By 1920 it was offering a six month course enabling the graduate to obtain a first grade commercial radio license and by January of 1922 was offering a four year course with a degree in Radio Engineering bestowed on graduates.
The school was founded by Mary Texanna Loomis, pictured in the last photo.
Born August 18, 1880 near Goliad, Texas. She was the second child born to Alvin Isaac and Caroline (Dryer) Loomis. Though born on homestead in Texas in 1880, by 1883 her parents had returned to Rochester NY and then on to Buffalo where Alvin became president of a large delivery and storage company. Little is known of her early years, but appears she had a fairly middle-class up bringing. She seemed well schooled, with an early interest in music and language (she mastered French, German and Italian) Her early years were spent in Buffalo, NY and she later relocated to Virginia. 
During the early years of World War I, she became interested in the new field of wireless telegraphy. There was a family precedent; her cousin, Dr. Mahlon Loomis, had conducted early wireless experiments with moderate success and may in fact have been the first person, in 1865, to send and receive wireless signals. 
Mary soon became proficient enough in wireless telegraphy to be granted a license by the United States Department of Commerce. Thoroughly fascinated with the field now called “radio”, she decided to turn her expertise into a career. Also, she wanted to do something that would honor her pioneering ancestor. Her idea was to do this by founding a radio school. 
Though radio was indeed, for many years, a profession dominated by men, Mary Loomis around age 40 took no notice and in 1920 founded the Loomis Radio School in Washington, D.C. and it quickly gained an excellent reputation. Ms. Loomis set high standards for the school and it attracted students not only from the United States but Europe and Asia as well. Loomis enjoyed teaching as much as she enjoyed radio itself. In an interview, she said, “Really, I am so infatuated with my work that I delight in spending from 12 to 15 hours a day at it. My whole heart and soul are in this radio school.” 
As president and Lecturer of the Loomis Radio School, Mary authored a definitive book on radio, named “Radio Theory and Operating.” 
By January 1922 the school was offering a four year course with a degree in Radio Engineering bestowed on graduates. Loomis also intended that her students understand more than just the inner and outer workings of radio. In addition to a radio laboratory (with equipment constructed almost entirely by Mary herself), the school maintained a complete shop capable of teaching carpentry, drafting and basic electricity. She reasoned that many of her graduates might find themselves at sea, or in other challenging situations and she wanted them adequately prepared. “No man,” Ms. Loomis said, at the time, “can graduate from my school until he learns how to make any part of the apparatus. I give him a blueprint of what I want him to do and tell him to go into the shop and keep hammering away until the job is completed.” 
The school appears to have been in existence at least through the early 1930’s, but it has not been possible to find information after that.
In an interview given to H.O. Bishop of the Dearborn Independent in 1921, Mary was asked: “What sort of young men are taking up the radio profession?” to which she replied:
“The Kind who have grit and want to get there! Virtually all of them are ambitious and enthusiastic over the possibility of visiting every nook and corner of the world. My students are not only enrolled from various sections of the USA and Canada but from many foreign countries, such as Sweden, Ireland, England, Poland, Russia, Austria, Rumania and the Philippines. One of the brightest pupils I ever had was Prince Walimuhomed of Far-away Afghanistan. He was an extremely modest young man, keeping his real identity a secret until after graduating. He said he had no idea of earning his living by working at radio, but just wanted to know all about it. He does.You have no idea how much happiness I get out of the success of each individual graduate. My boys keep in touch with me from all parts of the world. Scarcely a day goes by that I do not get some trinket or postcard from some remote section of the world. I have made the wonderful discovery that the only way for me to get happiness for myself is to make some one else happy. I find that I am making these young men happy by teaching them every phase of the radio business so that they can earn a comfortable living for themselves and their dependents and at the same time, see the great big beautiful world.
As far as we can figure out, Mary Loomis left Washington D.C. around 1935 and moved to San Francisco where she worked as a stenographer. She died in 1960 and is interred at Woodlawn Memorial Park, Colma, CA. 
Source
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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William Friese-Greene, c. 1886
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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Jules Gervais Courtellemont :: Portrait of a woman dressed in clothing typical of Lagartera in Toledo, Spain, August 1924. Autochrome. | src National Geographic
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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During an intermission at the opening of the 57th regular season of the Metropolitan Opera House on November 24, 1941.
Photo: Associated Press
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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Look at the case and camera, like new! Polaroid Colorpack II Land Camera. Do you love cameras Tumblr? ❤️
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Tumblr LOVES cameras. The Kodak Colorpack II.
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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Big Swinger 3000! I had to get it with a name like that! This line was introduced in 1965, with the 3000 introduced as they gained popularity. More info at these links:
http://camera-wiki.org/wiki/Polaroid_Big_Swinger_3000
https://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/nmah_881141
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oldcamerasoldphotos · 2 years ago
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1927 Evening dress designed by Paul Poiret. From Art Deco, Art Nouveau & 20th Century Decoratif Arts Group, FB.
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