Three vintage cameras job lot


all cameras have been unchecked so don’t know if working g or not but all three are in used great condition please see photos for more details


•Kodak 66 Model II 120 Film Folding Camera with original box 1958

•Canon Sure Shot AF35M II Autoboy 35mm Compact Film Camera with unused film 1980s

•Eumig Electric Double 8mm Movie Camera Spy Espionage Spying with case 1955


-EUMIG 8mm movie camera from about 1955 used but in great condition was a camera used for spying and espionage


I. Mikrat Production with the Eumig Electric Movie Camera

The Eumig electric camera was an Austrian product with a focal length of 12.5 mm. When using the wide-angle attachment,

"Eumicron," it reduced the focal length in half (6.25 mm).


2. Attaching the camera

The camera was fastened above the center of the original document to be photographed using a table clamp mount.

The position of the camera was cor. firmed using the camera's viewfinder.

The distance from the original document to the negative plane should be 115 to 125 cm (3 to 4 feet). The document was illuminated evenly with two lamps, which were attached on either side.


3. Making the shots

Work took place in a darkened room with an orange-red safelight. The operator switched off the side lights illuminating the document and cut a piece of film into small pieces (2 x 1 cm). These pieces were placed in a light-tight cardboard box. A distance adjustment on the camera was not pos sible (fixed focus) and not necessary. The aperture was set to f/5.6. Then a piece of film was placed on the film plane window (with the light-sensitive layer towards the original), the camera body was closed, and the lens was blocked with the palm of one hand. With the other hand, the two side lamps were switched on, and vibrations in the apparatus were allowed to decay (stop movement). The hand was then removed from the lens to begin the exposure and replaced after the exposure time. After switching off the lamps, the exposed piece of film was removed from the camera and placed in the lightproof film-holding box. Using these techniques, it was possible to make fifty to sixty photographs in an hour.

The exposure time was dependent on the type of original material being copied, the brightness of the lamps, and the distance between the lamps and the material being photographed. Exposure times could range from between five seconds and one minute. The Kodak MR film was slightly less light sensitive than the mikrat film and required longer exposure times. Further-more, the MR film has a resolution of about 1,000 lines per millimeter and a very steep gradation.


4. Developing and fixing

Any hard-working developer was usable. The development time was about two to five minutes.


-Canon Sure Shot AF35M II Autoboy 35mm Compact Film Camera 1980s


The third in Canon's Sure Shot series, released in 1983. This was known as the (New) Sure Shot in the US, AF35M II in Europe, and Autoboy 2 in Japan. Its specifications are very similar to the original Sure Shot (but with a 4-element, 4-group lens this time) but can be identified by the sloped edge near the shutter release button.


This '80s film camera is ideal for beginners, amateurs and professionals. It’s in excellent condition and is ready to produce another lifetime of fantastic photos. Exposures are controlled electronically with automatic program shooting, allowing the photographer to focus on composition, framing, and just having fun.


-Kodak 66 Model II 120 Film Folding Camera


The Kodak 66 is a self-erecting folding camera with a telescope-type optical viewfinder and a shutter release button on top of the camera body. It was Kodak's only postwar folder for type 120 film rolls, making twelve 6x6cm exposures. It was manufactured in the UK by Kodak Ltd. between 1958 and 1960[1]. The labeling on the metal plate on the plastic top designates it as "Model III"; there was also a Model II, which has an f6.3/75mm Kodak Anaston lens mounted in a three-speed Velio shutter. The Model III has a double exposure prevention device and a film reminder dial, neither of which are present on the Model II. There was no Model I, and it has been suggested that the camera was originally to have been called the Rapier.


Lens: Kodak Anaston 75mm f6.3 or f/4.5

Shutter: Velio five-speed (1/200, 1/100, 1/50, 1/25, 1/10 + B) or three-speed (1/200, 1/75, 1/25 +


Item comes form a pet and smoke free home