Bobitybob Posted March 3, 2017 Share #1 Posted March 3, 2017 Advertisement (gone after registration) That's if there's any 135 film left!! http://www.camerhack.it/product/fakmatic-135-to-126-film-adapter-kit/ 4 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Advertisement Posted March 3, 2017 Posted March 3, 2017 Hi Bobitybob, Take a look here Anyone still got a 126 camera then this could be for you. I'm sure you'll find what you were looking for!
mikemgb Posted March 3, 2017 Share #2 Posted March 3, 2017 Now that is awesome! Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
adan Posted March 5, 2017 Share #3 Posted March 5, 2017 (edited) My wide always loves it when I put sprocket holes across her forehead. More seriously, a nice bit of innovation. I notice LOMO has found someone who will cut and package 110-format Instamatic film for them, as well. My local lab's machine will even process the film - but can't print strips that small, they have to be gang-scanned on a flatbed. There do exist 110 film-carriers for some Nikon Coolscans, though. Edited March 5, 2017 by adan Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
EoinC Posted March 18, 2017 Share #4 Posted March 18, 2017 My wide always loves it when I put sprocket holes across her forehead. Is that a Freudian slip? 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
MarkP Posted March 18, 2017 Share #5 Posted March 18, 2017 I'd have thought that there weren't many 110 or 126 cameras that had a lens good enough to waste the money on. Especially considering how cheap second hand 135mm P&S film cameras are now. I'll try not to remember my Kodak 126 Instamatic cameras with the plastic lenses. Although I do remember my first Kodak 110 Instamatic camera when I was a kid. Poor man's (or poor kid's) Minox. I thought I was so cool with my little Kodak spy camera. We used to love those little disposable 4-shot flash cubes that clipped onto the top of the Instamatic cameras. Went around triggering them by using something to flick up those little wires in the bottom of the flash to trigger it off camera. Ah the good old days . Then a family friend gave me his Pentax Auto 110 with the 3 lenses when I was 16 or 17. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentax_Auto_110 - a little jewel of a camera and lenses. Then I thought I was tres cool . I shot print and slide film (who remembers those adapters for 110 to 35mm slides) on the Pentax for six months or so but gave up due to the primary intrinsic weakness of this and all 110 cameras - one can only get so much image quality out of a negative a quarter the size of 35mm film. So from then on I stuck with 35mm SLRs. Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
chris_livsey Posted March 18, 2017 Share #6 Posted March 18, 2017 I shot a lot of B/W on 110 For quality try: Pentax Auto 110 with 5 prime lenses, the 18mm f/2.8, the 24mm f/2.8, the 50mm f/2.8, the 18mm, the 70mm f/2.8 telephoto and zoom, the 20-40mm f/2.8. Rollei A110 23mm f/2.8 Tessar Minox 110S 25mm f2.8 lens ( the last one I saw sold for £15 but that was when film was hard to find) Canon 110E 26mm f2.7 four elements in four groups Minolta 110 Zoom Mark II Rokkor Zoom lens 25-67mm f3.5, Multicoated 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
peterbengtson Posted March 19, 2017 Share #7 Posted March 19, 2017 Advertisement (gone after registration) Even with good lenses the flaw in the 126 system was film plane consistency and flatness due to variations in the cartridges and inconsistent hold back tension to keep the film flat. Same problems in the 110 cameras compounded by smaller negative size and bigger enlargment. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
wlaidlaw Posted March 22, 2017 Share #8 Posted March 22, 2017 I shot a lot of B/W on 110 For quality try: Pentax Auto 110 with 5 prime lenses, the 18mm f/2.8, the 24mm f/2.8, the 50mm f/2.8, the 18mm, the 70mm f/2.8 telephoto and zoom, the 20-40mm f/2.8. Rollei A110 23mm f/2.8 Tessar Minox 110S 25mm f2.8 lens ( the last one I saw sold for £15 but that was when film was hard to find) Canon 110E 26mm f2.7 four elements in four groups Minolta 110 Zoom Mark II Rokkor Zoom lens 25-67mm f3.5, Multicoated My wife used to use the Canon 110 ED. It even printed the date at the bottom of each frame. I wonder what happened to it as I don't recall selling it at any point. Probably thrown away. Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikemgb Posted March 22, 2017 Share #9 Posted March 22, 2017 I finally decided to buy one of these, only to find it's backordered! Oh well. Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
pico Posted March 22, 2017 Share #10 Posted March 22, 2017 Flashcubes! I witnessed a tourist in Paris who placed her Instamatic camera backwards, and fired the cube at zero-blank range into her forehead. Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Peter H Posted March 22, 2017 Share #11 Posted March 22, 2017 I didn't remember that Kodak made a rangefinder Instamatic. Welcome, dear visitor! As registered member you'd see an image here… Simply register for free here – We are always happy to welcome new members! Quote Link to post Share on other sites Simply register for free here – We are always happy to welcome new members! ' data-webShareUrl='https://www.l-camera-forum.com/topic/269991-anyone-still-got-a-126-camera-then-this-could-be-for-you/?do=findComment&comment=3239364'>More sharing options...
Bobitybob Posted March 23, 2017 Author Share #12 Posted March 23, 2017 If you don't fancy a rangefinder you could try the SLR version http://camerapedia.wikia.com/wiki/Kodak_Instamatic_Reflex Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
earleygallery Posted March 23, 2017 Share #13 Posted March 23, 2017 Or a Contaflex 126....http://www.earlyphotography.co.uk/site/entry_C721.html I don't think I'd bother buying the adaptor for a cheapo Kodak instamatic, there's plenty of cheap 35mm plastic lens cameras to use instead. Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Peter H Posted March 23, 2017 Share #14 Posted March 23, 2017 Or a Contaflex 126....http://www.earlyphotography.co.uk/site/entry_C721.html I don't think I'd bother buying the adaptor for a cheapo Kodak instamatic, there's plenty of cheap 35mm plastic lens cameras to use instead. A range of lenses specifically for the one camera. It's like the SL of the 126 world! 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
wattsy Posted March 23, 2017 Share #15 Posted March 23, 2017 I always like an innovative solution to even the most trifling of problems but you have to really love your old 126 camera to want to bother with this. I'm struggling to think of a comparable example of an equally pointless effort – perhaps something like trying to shoehorn reel-to-reel audio tape into a dictaphone cassette? Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikemgb Posted March 23, 2017 Share #16 Posted March 23, 2017 I always like an innovative solution to even the most trifling of problems but you have to really love your old 126 camera to want to bother with this. I'm struggling to think of a comparable example of an equally pointless effort – perhaps something like trying to shoehorn reel-to-reel audio tape into a dictaphone cassette? How about building adapters to enable 120 film to be used in a 116 camera? I did that too. I would like this adapter for a project I'm planning, this year I'm shooting a 365 with my Sofort, a photo every day. Next year I want to shoot a different camera every week, I currently have 30 I can use, adding 126 into the mix would give me another 4 or 5. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
pico Posted March 23, 2017 Share #17 Posted March 23, 2017 (edited) How about building adapters to enable 120 film to be used in a 116 camera? I did that too. Mike, in case you haven't seen them, thanks to Holgamods, there are several different film spool adapters for our obsolete cameras. Very much fun, I think. -- Your upstream neighbor, Pico Edited March 23, 2017 by pico Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikemgb Posted March 23, 2017 Share #18 Posted March 23, 2017 Thank you Pico, there's some interesting stuff there, some of those adapters could definitely be useful. Talking fun, I found a Polaroid Sonar in my collection last night loaded with a film pack, now I just need to try and power it and see if I can get an image. Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
earleygallery Posted March 23, 2017 Share #19 Posted March 23, 2017 I always like an innovative solution to even the most trifling of problems but you have to really love your old 126 camera to want to bother with this. I'm struggling to think of a comparable example of an equally pointless effort – perhaps something like trying to shoehorn reel-to-reel audio tape into a dictaphone cassette? I went to the Scalford Hifi show last weekend, there were a few systems with reel to reel tapes there so it's still relevant for people who like it. They even had some of those gadgets that play those old fashioned CD discs! Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
wattsy Posted March 23, 2017 Share #20 Posted March 23, 2017 (edited) I went to the Scalford Hifi show last weekend, there were a few systems with reel to reel tapes there so it's still relevant for people who like it. Yes, I'm sure there was – reel to reel is high quality. I doubt though that anyone there was trying to fit a reel to reel tape into a cassette just so that they could play it in one of these. Edited March 23, 2017 by wattsy 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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