This book traces the changes in the years from 1945 to 1965 when there were considerable advances in photography and in cameras. At the start of the period most snapshot photographs were black and white contact prints made from box and folding bellows camera negatives; by the end snapshooters enjoyed the simplicity of instant loading cameras, automatic exposure control, built-in-flash and colour prints.
The interchangeable lend 35mm camera with coupled range-finder enjoyed a boom but had finally to give way to the single-lens reflex; 6cm square twin-lens reflex and folding roll-film cameras grew steadily in popularity until they were pushed aside by cameras taking smaller negatives.
Tiny cameras using 16mm film and half-frame 35mm cameras were popular for a while whilst the Polaroid instant picture system, launched shortly after the end of the war, went from strength to strength. The post-war shortages gave the chance to camera makers in Britain, America, Italy, France and elsewhere to challenge the strong German industry but only until the German industry fully recovered. By then German camera makers faced competition from Japan; by 1965 names suck as Nikon, Pentax and Canon, unknown in 1945 had become world famous.
Contents:
1. Introduction
2. Snapshot or simple cameras
3. Roll-film folding cameras
4. Non-reflex 35mm and other miniature cameras
5. Reflex cameras
6. Half-frame and subminiature cameras
7. Special-purpose cameras
8. Museums
9. Books
10. Organisations
Index