tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1423901.post5649044935527812697..comments2024-03-28T19:19:12.154-06:00Comments on Photography & Vintage Film Cameras: Kodak Pony 828Mikehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00776670666673938282noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1423901.post-59736654595068276472017-05-21T06:45:18.277-06:002017-05-21T06:45:18.277-06:00I did have an article on the Pony IV on my web sit...I did have an article on the Pony IV on my web site. It had a sharp Anastar lens. Not sure what happened to the camera after we moved to Albuquerque, so may have to look for another one of these days.Mikehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00776670666673938282noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1423901.post-44498795601555459062017-05-20T20:12:35.494-06:002017-05-20T20:12:35.494-06:00Very interesting as usual Mike. Those are some nic...Very interesting as usual Mike. Those are some nice photos as well. The dog portrait is gorgeous. I seem to remember you did some very good work with a later model Pony some years back...best regards,<br />Jon jon campohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16459415644629299114noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1423901.post-59631242720364706342017-05-20T10:12:04.272-06:002017-05-20T10:12:04.272-06:00I'm a fan of Kodak products and the history of...I'm a fan of Kodak products and the history of the company is really interesting. There was a distinct company culture centered in Rochester. That produced an amazing industrial enterprise that spanned generations, but I think it also ultimately contributed to the company's demise. I did a review of The Story of Kodak a couple of years ago. The company sponsored book, published in 1990, had some revealing if inadvertent insights into how it would all come apart. Here is what the author reported about the company's view of the development of digital picture making:<br /><br />""Between these two positions lies the question of whether Kodak should aggressively enter the business of electronic image making. Simply put, will video render silver-halide photography a quaint, antique way of making pictures? Kodak analysts think not. By all accounts film remains and will continue to remain the preferred medium for picture taking..."<br /><br />I'm not quite sure what to make of that. It is a little hard to believe that a company with such vast information resources at its disposal could be so clueless about the near future. I suppose it could be that the management had become so inward focused that they were blinded to what was about to happen to the industry. On the other hand, I think it is also possible that they accurately perceived that the film industry was about to receive a mortal blow and they were manufacturing some serious hype in preparation for selling off the company assets.Mikehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00776670666673938282noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1423901.post-26270364425487375412017-05-20T09:32:53.422-06:002017-05-20T09:32:53.422-06:00What always fascinates me about Kodak is how they ...What always fascinates me about Kodak is how they manufactured virtually everything to support photography. Cameras and very fine lenses, tripods, photography how-to books, darkroom chemicals, darkroom hardware, photo sensitive paper. Of course, all of this was designed to drive more sales of their core and highest profit product: film.<br /><br />Their cameras ranged from entry-level snap shooters that most anyone could afford up to higher end cameras which cost several month's wages; so they had products for beginners and advanced shooters. And while they produced simple camera lenses, they also crafted very fine higher end optics.<br /><br />I wish I would have taken a photo of the inside of last darkroom I had back in the 1990s. It would have been an advertisement for Kodak. Kodak safelights, Kodak chemical beakers, Kodak trays and tongs, Kodak print siphon, Kodak D-76 and Dektol developer, Kodak Indicator Stop Bath, Kodak Rapid Fixer, Kodak Photo-Flo, Kodak Polycontrast Filter Kit, In the fridge, boxes of various Kodak single and multi-grade papers, Kodak Tri-X, Kodak Plus-X...oh how the mighty have fallen.JR Smithhttp://www.fogdog-photography.comnoreply@blogger.com