One of my wife’s favorite pastimes is browsing in antique stores and malls. I frequently accompany her on these visits, occupying my time shooting photos, usually with an iPhone, of items or displays that I find interesting and/or nostalgic.
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I recall seeing the Memorex magnetic recording tape commercials many years ago, but I do not recall Memorex brand radios, which seems strange, since Memorex came into existence in 1961, while I was in high school. I had a Westinghouse clock radio in my bedroom then, not Memorex.
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Having photography as a hobby, I’m always drawn to displays of old cameras.
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The vendor of the booth in which this odd electronic device is displayed has an elaborate description of its ability to transport one in space and time. I see no Flux Capacitor, but there are numerous potentiometers in its Circulator panel.
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Cameras, comic books and yams. What can be better?
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Remember when cameras were manufactured in the U.S.?
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Six-20 Camera, as opposed to Brownie Scouts or Fudge Brownies.
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Not sure what makes these “Lucky”, but it was a popular brand for years.
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Sieves used for sorting some materiel by diameter, probably have/had numerous application in industries. Maybe these even were even used for particle size distribution analysis of data that I used in my job, prior to retirement.
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Colorful lamp shades hark back to the early days of popular home electric lighting.
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Rows of colorful glassware always catch my eye,
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as do rows and shelves filled with old cameras. Such displays remind me of how fast technology advances. This image (and all others in this post) were made with a device that is obsolete, even though it is only a few years old.
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Not Dak Prescot, but seen in Dallas.
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From Wikipedia: “An anastigmat or anastigmatic lens is a photographic lens completely corrected for the three main optical aberrations: spherical aberration, coma, and astigmatism. Early lenses often included the word Anastigmat in their name to advertise this new feature”.
I learned something new from this old camera.
All the best,
Ken