The Box Brownie is a photograph by Linsey Williams which was uploaded on February 25th, 2014.
Title
The Box Brownie
Artist
Linsey Williams
Medium
Photograph - Photography And Texture
Description
Courtesy of Wikipedia.
Brownie is the name of a long-running popular series of simple and inexpensive cameras made by Eastman Kodak. The Brownie popularized low-cost photography and introduced the concept of the snapshot. The first Brownie, introduced in February 1900,was a very basic cardboard box camera with a simple meniscus lens that took 2¼-inch square pictures on 117 rollfilm. With its simple controls and initial price of $1, it was intended to be a camera that anyone could afford and use, hence the slogan, "You push the button, we do the rest." The camera was named after the popular cartoons created by Palmer Cox.
One of the most popular Brownie models was the Brownie 127, millions of which were sold between 1952 and 1967. The Brownie 127 was a simple bakelite camera for 127 film which featured a simple meniscus lens and a curved film plane to compensate for the deficiencies of the lens. Another simple camera was the Brownie Cresta which was sold between 1955 and 1958. It used 120 film and had a fixed-focus lens.
Having written an article in the 1940s for amateur photographers suggesting an expensive camera was unnecessary for quality photography, Picture Post photographer Bert Hardy used a Brownie camera to stage a carefully posed snapshot of two young women sitting on railings above a breezy Blackpool promenade.
In 1908, the Austrian architectural critic Joseph August Lux wrote a book called Künstlerische Kodakgeheimnisse (Artistic Secrets of the Kodak) in which he championed the use of the camera for its cultural potential. Guided by a position that was influenced by the Catholic critique of modernity, he argued that the accessibility the camera provided for the amateur meant that people could photograph and document their surroundings and thus produce a type of stability in the ebb and flow of the modern world.
Uploaded
February 25th, 2014
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Comments (27)
Jan Dappen
revisiting to congratulate you on your feature in the Road to Self Promotion....well deserved!
Kathleen Scanlan
I remember using one of these! They took excellent photos, too. Very good still and the background give this piece a nice, soft feeling of times gone by.
Carol Lynn Coronios
Where so many of us started! Great still life, Linsey! Congrats on your Features!
Henry Kowalski
simple and so effective...this makes me nostalgic....wish I had saved my very first one