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Popular Agfa Ansco Box Cameras of the 1930sAgfa Ansco Made Nine Cameras in Five Models During the Thirties
Box cameras on the market in the 1930s were rugged, inexpensive, and easy to use. Some had built-in accessories, others had attachments, but consumers liked them all.
Box cameras got their name from their rigid boxy shape, most often rectangular but sometimes a cube. They often had fixed focus, fixed lens opening and limited speeds. They gave the beginner an opportunity to learn the basics of photography such as composition and subject choice, without too much emphasis on complicated technical details. Here is a summary of the box cameras produced by Agfa Ansco during the 1930s. Agfa Ansco Company Manufactured Nine Popular Box CamerasAgfa Ansco was located in Binghamton, New York and produced box cameras from 1928 until it was seized by the United States government in 1941. According to Willard D. Morgan, editor of The Complete Photographer, they made nine cameras in five models, as follows: Shur-Shot Box Cameras
Cadet Box Cameras
Cadet Flash Box Cameras
Pioneer Box Cameras
Agfa Chief Box Cameras
The most common problem with these Agfa Ansco box cameras was difficulty in loading the film. It was hard to keep light from hitting the film and causing fogginess on the edges of the finished print. In spite of this drawback, box cameras were surprisingly easy to use for outdoor and indoor portraits, action shots, landscapes, and silhouettes. Agfa Ansco had only one major competitor during the 1930s. The Eastman Kodak Company was located in Rochester, New York and had developed its line of box cameras earlier. Both brands laid the foundation for millions of Americans who enjoy taking their own photographs.
The copyright of the article Popular Agfa Ansco Box Cameras of the 1930s in Collectibles is owned by Marie Brannon. Permission to republish Popular Agfa Ansco Box Cameras of the 1930s in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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