8mm Cine Kodak Eight Model 60 - Overview and Loading
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- Опубликовано: 8 ноя 2021
- Michael Raso gives an overview of the 1932 Cine Kodak Eight Model 60 8mm camera.
This affordable vintage camera is available on eBay and fresh, new Double 8mm film is available at filmphotographystore.com/coll...
The “Doors” are really called “Keeper rollers”!
I learned how 8mm Kodak cameras worked in early 1964.
Excellent video!!
I have a still-working Model 20 with its original case. I love it.
Thanks so much for this video. Picked up one of these beauties today and I can't believe how well is has held together and still works after close to 100 years. I just need to pick up some film and get it developed and enjoy now!
I own this camera and it looks like it was made yesterday and I totally love it
It's no surprise these little marvels still work. Back then, tech purchases were investments in something which would function years later - and not be replaced by yearly upgrades. I own one - it's adorable; Kodak's chrome and leather look is a classic. This is a great little camera, brought to you by the company which invented the 16mm format, the 8mm format, but dropped the ball after inventing digital photography. 😥
Innovating digital photography*** 😂
Thank you Mike -- you guys go the extra mile to make film "friendly" -- it's great to know that the FFP not only has the supplies and services for film shooters, but also the knowledge and encouragement....
Thank you so very much for making this easy to understand video.
I have my grandfather's Ciné 8 model 60 canera that he took pictures of us kids at Christmas, Easter egg hunts , Birthdays , vacations and I never knew how to use it so it just sat on the shelf for decades.
Really classic cameras in their 35mm, 16mm, 9.5mm and 8mm classes have an inexplicable charm and attractiveness, starting from their outward appearance until you start recording and capturing the movie.. Especially when you are lucky and have the full experience and knowledge to develop your final film and provide the necessary chemicals and the rest when you succeed and enjoy your shots and watch them Whenever you need it.. really that's fun you will never find in the digital world.👍
Just bought one of these cameras , I love it. this video really helped me learn about this camera. thank you
Looks like a cool camera. The footage from these old cameras is so cool looking. Good video.
A solid, little standard 8 camera.👍🏾
Thank you!!! I’m using this exact model for my video editing class and this is so useful
Thanks for the video. It was very well explained 💯
Nicely done guys, nicely done. Can we pause for a moment and Admire the Kodak Cine Camera? Look at the materials! Look at the "Hand-Burnished main panel inside the film chamber! Look at the quality Nickel plating! Genuine Leather covering! The construction of the lens! (Which can be removed to fit alternative focal lengths!) If that camera were produced in 2022 it would/should retail for Eight to Ten Thousand Dollars!
My brother told me about this and I thought to myself, it must have been huge. But wow that is not the case. It's tiny!!😍
Mike Raso taught Steven Spielberg and George Lucas everything they know about film-making!!!
My grandpa had this. Hope they make 8mm rolls again.
Ready when you are - filmphotographystore.com/collections/movie-film/regular-8
Bought one of these at an estate sale years ago, still gotta get some film
Thanks for taking the time to make this! I love these vintage cameras and I hope to buy this exact model. Question for you... Does a full crank of the winder (meaning until it's tight) allow for the full 25 feet of film to run or are multiple windings needed? I'm a bit confused by this. It looks like one full wind will run the full 25'. Would you say this is a better camera than the ones with the three lenses on a turret (like the Brownie 225)? I'm trying to decide which one to buy.
Hi Karen, Fully wound, cameras will run about 30 seconds (I never thought about it by # of feet). The Cine-Kodak and the Kodak Brownie models are very different cameras. The 225 Turret Model (video: ruclips.net/video/9ziL1RY6nHg/видео.html ) is much easier to grab-and-go and easier to use. The much older Cine-Kodak is built like a tank - both deliver good images. Enjoy shooting! - Mike
@@FilmPhotographyProject Thanks for this! I guess I will have to buy both cameras. LOL I remember we used to have one of the single lens Brownie 8mm cameras. I played with it as a kid. I had forgotten all about it until I came across your videos. Sadly I don't know where it went but I have no doubt it would still be working today if I still had it. :-)
I found the same one in an antique store for $39! Just learning to use it.
Long live 8 mm
Lol what music was playing when the video showed the camera ?
Do you guys have a video on the Kodak Escort 8? I can't get mine to work and am having a hard time finding resources. Thanks!!
Your 8mm camera is fully automatic--so getting proper exposure relies on the internal meter working properly (there is no manual mode in this camera). Since it is a selenium cell censor (i.e. doesn't require a battery to power it) there is a very good chance that it has lost its accuracy due to age and may not properly expose the film resulting in shooting a blank roll. My advice would be to purchase the identical (but all manual) Kodak Brownie 8, Kodak Brownie II or Kodak Brownie FunSaver camera - all available inexpensively on ebay.com. Hope this is helpful!
I have both the 8mm and 16mm version. Mine take a cartridge type film.
thank you so much i got one of these for 10 dollars at a thrift shop a year ago and there was no guide on how to use it anywhere on the internet, So excited to start using it. I still cannot find a place to get it developed or any standard 8 that isnt expired, does anybody have any website suggestions?
The Film Photography Project - filmphotographystore.com/collections/movie-film/double-8
Hi! I recently got a Cine-Kodak Eight model 20, is double 8 film the way to go for this also? I read a website which told me super8 but that doesn’t seem right :) appreciate your advice
Hi. The Cine-Kodak Eight model 20 is almost identical to the Model 60 so this video can serve as the tutorial for your model 20. Takes Double 8 25ft rolls. ISO 40 or lower is recommended.
filmphotographystore.com/collections/movie-film/double-8
@@FilmPhotographyProject thanks!!
I have a model 90 but I’m not sure what film it takes. Do you sell the 8mm cart by any chance?
Hi. Send me an email with a picture of the open film compartment. Happy to assist. Michael@FilmPhotographyProject.com
How do you transfer the roll into a digital file? Can they do that for you when it’s developed in the lab?
The FPP offers development and scan services for movie film. Your developed film roll is returned to you along with a HD mp4 file.
Geweldige camera heb er één in bezit wat is de waarde van zo´n camera
10 tot 50 dollar op eBay in de Verenigde Staten.
merci
@@FilmPhotographyProject
Read and follow directions ➡️↗️↘️
I wander what movie cameras cost in the 1930's. Your camera is a nice specimen
The standard model 20 cost $29,50 in 1932, that is inflation adjusted about $668 in 2022. This model 60 cost $67,50 which means more than $1400 today.
does flipping the film need to happen in a literal dark room?
Flip your roll in dim light.
Why not do a video where you load that camera or a different camera in the type of low light you're talking about. Can't see anyone loading that camera with no light - Film Sweats would prevent that.