The Instamatic is a series of inexpensive, easy-to-load 126 and 110 made by Kodak beginning in 1963. The Instamatic was immensely successful, introducing a generation to low-cost photography and spawning numerous imitators.
During its heyday, the range was so ubiquitous that the Instamatic name is still frequently used as a generic trademark to refer to any inexpensive point-and-shoot camera. It is also frequently used incorrectly to describe Kodak's Kodamatic line of instant camera.
Kodak also used the Instamatic name on some Super 8-based home-cine cameras. Kodak Movie Cameras, nwmangum.com. Article retrieved 2006-11-09.
The first Instamatic to be released was the Instamatic 50, which appeared in the United Kingdom in February 1963. The first model released in the US was the basic Instamatic 100, approximately one month later, which included a built-in flashgun for single-use AG-1 "peanut" bulbs, a feature lacking in the 50. With non-adjustable aperture, focus, and shutter speed ( sec.), it continued in the tradition of Kodak's earlier Brownie cameras, providing a simple snapshot camera anyone could use, with the added convenience of drop-in loading using "Kodapak" cartridges. These were offered initially with one of four preloaded films: Verichrome Pan, Kodachrome, Kodacolor-X, and Kodak Portra.
The first Instamatics went on sale for $16 in early 1963
The lineup was soon expanded to include a variety of models from the basic but popular 100/104 to the automatic exposure 800/804, which featured an aluminum chassis, rangefinder, selenium light meter, and clockwork spring wind. The best model made in the USA was the 814, which had a four-element lens and a coupled range-finder. The top-of-the-line model was the Instamatic Reflex (1969), a single-lens reflex camera which was made in Germany and could accept a variety of Kodak Retina S-mount lenses. Some German-built Instamatic cameras such as the 250 and 500 included fixed lenses made by Rodenstock and Schneider Kreuznach.
Many other manufacturers attempted to capitalize on the popularity of the Instamatic with their own 126 cameras, including Canon, Olympus, Minolta, Ricoh, Zeiss Ikon, and even Rollei. Some of these models were far more sophisticated and expensive than the majority of the Kodak cameras: the Rollei SL26, for instance, featured interchangeable lenses (28mm, 40mm, and 80mm), TTL metering, and a rangefinder, and retailed for $300.
A new series of Instamatics was introduced in 1970 to take advantage of the new Magicube flash technology. Magicubes used mechanically triggered pyrotechnic detonators for each bulb, eliminating the need to carry batteries. Instamatics with Magicube sockets were denoted by an "X" in the model number (e.g. X-15 or 55X).
At launch in the United States, there were five models: in ascending order of sophistication, the Pocket Instamatic 20, 30, 40, 50, and 60. The top-of-the-line model was the Pocket Instamatic 60, which featured a stainless steel body, rangefinder, and automatic exposure with a four-element 26 mm Ektar lens. Programmed autoexposure selected an appropriate combination of aperture, with shutter speeds ranging from to 10 seconds. The 50 shared the same lens and autoexposure system, but dropped the rangefinder for scale focusing. The 40 had a much slower 25 mm three-element lens and two-position focusing, and the 30 had an even slower 25 mm fixed-focus lens; both carried a similar programmed autoexposure system. The 20 shared the same 25 mm fixed-focus lens as the 30 and offered a single shutter speed of second, which automatically changed to when a flashcube was inserted. An entry-level Pocket Instamatic 10 was launched by 1973, with a fixed-focus 25 mm lens and operation similar to the 20.
By 1977, the initial lineup had been replaced by the Trimlite Instamatic and Tele-Instamatic lines for the United States. The Trimlite Instamatic 48 was a rebadged Pocket Instamatic 60, carrying the same features as the previous top-line model, and other Trimlites included the 38 (similar to the Pocket 40), 28 (Pocket 30), and 18 (Pocket 10). The Tele-Instamatics featured a sliding teleconverter switch. That line included the 708, which offered a new "multi-element" (three-element 25 mm or four-element 43 mm) lens with scale focusing and programmed autoexposure, similar to the prior Pocket 50, and the 608, which switched the single-element lens from 25 mm to 43 mm, both , with a fixed shutter speed similar to the prior Pocket 20; engaging the teleconverter also would switch the viewfinder.
Kodak introduced a mass-produced aspheric lens for still photography in October 1978 with the Ektramax 110 camera. The lens is a four-element, 25 mm design with scale focusing. Three of the elements, including the aspheric one, are molded plastic.
Over 25 million Pocket Instamatics were produced in under three years, and the 110 format remained popular into the 1990s. However, the small negative size (13×17 mm) limited quality when using the film emulsion of the period; in practice, most prints were small, so the poor quality was not apparent unless the prints were enlarged beyond postcard size.
Hipstamatic, an automated photograph post-processing application for mobile devices released in 2009, used an interface inspired by the Instamatic to produce similar toy camera-like images and was meant to evoke "a simpler-is-better past, an age where cheap, mass-produced plastic cameras were built to last". It was named as one of the top iPhone application "award winners" by Apple in 2010. A few years later, the Instagram social media network included filters "designed to make digital photographs look like snapshots taken with the toy cameras of yesteryear: the Kodak Brownie, the Instamatic, the Polaroid". The simple, geometric physical Instamatic camera design and square image format captured on 126 film directly inspired the updated Instagram logo and aesthetic. Like Hipstamatic, Instagram was named the "iPhone App Of The Year" by Apple in 2011. The two services were combined by Slate in 2012 as the inadvertently circular portmanteau Instamatic.
Commercial success
Pocket Instamatic (110 format)
Mid-1970s to late 1980s
Contemporary influence
Instamatic cameras
+126 film Kodak Instamatic cameras
! colspan=2 rowspan=2 Lens
! rowspan=2 Shutter (sec)
! rowspan=2 Market(s)
! rowspan=2 class="unsortable" Notes +Instamatic Reflex kit lenses
! Focal length !! Mfr. !! Aperture range !! Construction !! Focus
See also
External links
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