Moulded plastic 127 film camera
Made from September 1963-1966
f/14 plastic lens, fixed aperture and single shutter speed
Moulded plastic 127 film camera
Made from September 1963-1966
f/14 plastic lens, fixed aperture and single shutter speed
With instruction book
The Kodak Brownie 127 is a plastic box camera for eight 4×6 cm pictures on 127 film, made in England by Kodak Ltd. It was an extremely popular snapshot camera in Britain. From its introduction in 1952, over a million had been made by August 1954, and the series continued to sell many more millions.
From http://camera-wiki.org/wiki/Kodak_Brownie_127
This is a Second Model which was in production from 1959-1963
1977 Instant Film camera by Eastman Kodak Company – The Handle
Kodak PR-10 Film
The Kodak Brownie Reflex non-synchronized camera was manufactured from May 1940 to Aug 1942 in the US. It had a simple Bakelite body camera with a main lens and a second-surface keystone reflecting mirror viewfinder. The viewfinder had a hinged sheet metal cover. The winder was on the base, which was removable for film loading. Note the lack of flash synchronization terminals below the main lens on the non-sync model.
The Kodak Brownie Reflex Synchro model was manufactured from Sept 1941-May 1952 in the US and from 1946 to May 1960 in the UK; some were also made in Canada. Thus overall the model had a 20 year production run. The synchro model had a two-pin flash connector below the taking lens, and had the shutter selector inverted.
From http://camera-wiki.org/wiki/Kodak_Brownie_Reflex