5 (157) · € 10.99 · En stock
Manufactured in 1995 by the Eastman Kodak Company. This “second generation” single use camera changes the cameras to be smaller and less boxey. Loaded with 27 exposures of Kodak Gold 400 film, it provided a simple point and shoot in a small package. Are disposable cameras collectable? First, they are a phenomena of the late 20th / early 21st century. The more proper term “Single Use Camera” and they brought photography to the truly occasional photographer. They became unique for the odd features and varieties. And their use is now engrained in our culture—who doesn’t put out several at their wedding reception for the guests to snap pictures of each other! And, by their specific nature, they are destroyed. So common today that they hang at every grocery checkout line, but one day they’ll be rare. You decide…
Kodak FunSaver Pocket 35mm Single Use Film Camera
Disposable Camera Developing from Process One
Kodak FunSaver Disposable Film Camera - Parallax Photographic
Kodak to stop making cameras, digital frames
Kodak Color 35mm 800 Iso Disposable Fun Saver Camera With Flash
Kodak FunSaver Disposable Film Camera
Best disposable film cameras - Amateur Photographer
Kodak Funsaver 27 - Disposable Film Camera
The Best Disposable Cameras for a Little Nostalgic Fun
Best disposable camera 2023: The top single-use cameras for parties, holidays and weddings
Single Use Cameras
How to Get Film out of a Disposable Camera
Half Full or Half Empty ? - Kodak Ektar H35 Review - Canny Cameras
Kodak FunSaver Disposable Single Use Camera - 27 Exposures - Bristol Cameras