spring camerama

Toronto. Our friend Gary Perry has announced his first show of the year. Address any question to Gary at email: cameramashow@gmail.com or use Phone/Text: 905-550-7477.

The Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre
6 Sakura Way, Toronto, M3C 1Z5
Show Hours: 10:00am – 3:00pm
Admission $10, Students $8 (with valid ID)
 

We still have a few vendor tables available so if you have been thinking of getting a table to sell some of your gear now is the time!

Tables cost $100 (8ft) and include entrance for you and a helper. 

March 1, 2026 CAMERAMA show

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Winter Photographic History Auction

a familiar figure

Toronto. Louis Daguerre is famous for releasing the first publicly announced practical process for photography – and for offering it free to all outside the UK.

His portrait (shown here) is one of the lots in the upcoming auction of old photographic images by Michael Lehr.

Mr Lehr has an auction house down in New Jersey. He announced his latest photographic images auction recently.

The auction will begin on January 31, 2026. Anyone can bid online for a particular lot. Notice of the auction is in this post.   Details on the lots-catalogue offered and how to bid are on his web site.

PS. This is a great chance to add more Americana images to your collection.

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keeping it small …

lot 339 – a small Super Baldinette made in the early 1950s by Balda

Toronto. Lot 339 in February’s auction (Feb 15th) is a fine example of keeping cameras small, This Balda folds up like a Retina and can be dropped in a pocket. The auction lots include many small 35mm cameras and a few even smaller subminiature cameras like the famous Minox.

Shown at left is a Super Baldinette made by Balda in the early 1950s. The camera could be purchased with a few different lenses of varying maximum aperture and cost. The camera in lot 339 has a high quality f/2 Rodenstock lens with a Synchro-Compur leaf shutter.

IMPORTANT: OUR AUCTION WAS RESCHEDULED TO FEB 15th DUE TO BAD WEATHER. Come out on Sunday, February 15th  and enjoy the ambience of our first 2026 event, Remember, admission is free and so is the parking. The auction location is the Legion Hall 101 in Long Branch (southwest Toronto). Slightly west of Brown’s line (highway 427/27) on the Lakeshore.

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field of view

lot 488 in the Feb 15, 2026 PHSC auction features a field camera with lens

Toronto. In the 1800s professional outdoor photographers were easy to spot: A dark viewing cloth, a wooden tripod and a field camera shouted it out loud!

The wooden view camera spanned the wet plate and dry plate eras. Smaller, metal or leather covered view cameras with far more elaborate adjustments joined the market when cut film arrived. Even roll film backs came along as film was introduced.

The 1800s field camera, like later ‘folders’, could be collapsed to make the beast easier to store and move. Basically, a thin wooden box at the back of the camera held a ground glass for focussing plus a means to replace the ground glass with an emulsion-coated glass plate. At the front was the lens board and lens combination, separated by a bellows, sometime ‘square’ but usually like a pyramid on its side. Various brass bits allow focussing and some lens adjustment, folding, and trim.

Shown here is lot 488, a typical dry plate field camera with Waterhouse stops to adjust the lens aperture (wet plate field cameras are rare as the very act of using the camera slowly destroys its wooden parts).

IMPORTANT: OUR AUCTION WAS RESCHEDULED DUE TO BAD WEATHER. Join us at our February 15, 2026 auction and see the amazing lots ready for the hammer. You are sure to find items for your collection or your user gear!

Note: The post title is a riff on the 1989 movie title “Field of Dreams“.

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*** AUCTION DATE CHANGE ***

HI FOLKS

DUE TO THE COLD WEATHER THIS WEEKEND

AND THE FORECAST FOR HEAVY SNOW THIS SUNDAY, JAN 25th

OUR AUCTION HAS BEENED MOVED TO FEB 15, 2026

AT THE SAME PLACE.  A NEW POSTER WILL GO LIVE TONIGHT

THE PHSC APOLOGIZES FOR THE POSSIBLE INCONVENIENCE 

STAY WARM!

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it isn’t easy being square …

lot 355 -a Voigtlander Superb TLR from the 1930s

Toronto. Most cameras/negatives produce a rectangular image but some do not. Instead, the photographer can expose for the square image, or visualize a landscape or portrait print.

One issue with smaller cameras was the ‘squinty’ viewfinder. To solve this issue, one camera design evolved to a viewfinder as big as the negative creating the famous twin lens reflex camera (TLR).

However; solving one problem raised another: the camera was almost impossible to use on its side. This was solved by making the negative format square eliminated the need to hold the camera sideways.

IMPORTANT: OUR AUCTION WAS RESCHEDULED TO FEB 15th DUE TO BAD WEATHER.  A typical TLR is the Voigtländer Superb (lot 355). This and a few other TLRs will be offered at our February 15th auction. Come on down to our first 2026 event and bid on items that tweak your interest (collecting, using, etc.)

NB: The title of this post is a riff on Kermit the frog’s famous ditty,”It’s Not Easy Being Green“.

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you can get any lot you want …

lot 462 – high contrast polaroid film 4×5

Toronto. At our Feb 15th auction. An example is this package of 4×5 film by polaroid (lot 462).IMPORTANT: OUR Jan 25th AUCTION WAS RESCHEDULED TO FEB 15th DUE TO BAD WEATHER.

Cameras and lenses old and newish are featured in the lots plus stere gear, movie gear, books, photographic accessories.

Something for everyone. and to your collection or user gear.

The auction is at the usual location – Legion Hall 101 in Long Branch (southwest area of the big smoke).

Note: The post title is a riff on a line in Arlo Guthrie’s iconic 1967 folk song, “Alice’s Restaurant Massacree” sung by Arlo himself.  It’s a long song but worth the time. I bought the LP of the same name when it was first released.

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for medical apparatus collectors…

a c1917 ‘Violet Machine by Renulife of Detroit MI

Toronto. … an electrifying experience! In the last century inventions and innovations exploded. And with no pressure to ‘prove’ any advertised claim, it was a wild west show to make a buck.

This led to many odd ball gizmos and medicines. One example is lot 535 – a c1917 device that used electricity to ‘renew life’. In fact, it was tagged ‘Renulife’ and produced by the “Renulife Electric Co., in Detroit, MI”.

They made their machine called the “Violet Ray Health Generator” in the late 1910s and 1920s – as you can see, even the Smithsonian down in Washington has one.

You can add to your collection by bidding at our Febuary 15th auction. (IMPORTANT: OUR JAN 25th AUCTION WAS RESCHEDULED TO FEB 15th DUE TO BAD WEATHER.) Take a peek at the gizmo online and in person.  And for those collecting or using photo gear, there are 100s of lots available – cameras, lenses, accessories, etc. See the above link for details (free parking, easy access,  free admission).

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flashy stuff

lot 361 at the Jan 25 2026 auction – an old Kodak Magnesium Ribbon holder

Toronto. The idea of flash powder offered a bright light for photography – and facial burns for the unwary. Magnesium Ribbon allowed a controlled amount of “flash powder” to be used giving the bright light while avoiding the accidental burns. Kodak offered their version in a nifty container as shown at left.

Our February 15, 2026 auction (IMPORTANT: OUR JAN 25th AUCTION WAS RESCHEDULED TO FEB 15th DUE TO BAD WEATHER) features a Kodak Magnesium Ribbon Holder as lot 361. Come on down to the Long Branch (southwest Toronto) legion hall and see this and many other lots of historic and usable items.

The details are posted  on this web site. They will remain pinned to the front page until the auction is finished.

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know when to fold ’em …

a Kodak Folder from the first part of the 20th century – lot 336.

Toronto. … as Kenny Rogers once sang. A step up in camera design was the so-called folder popular around 1930-1950. Between uses, the camera could be easily collapsed for the pocket. The focussing bellows collapsed into the camera body along with the lens, viewfinder, and shutter. The base plate closed off the front of the camera to seal it from dust and dirt. Struts closed the camera and a ‘hidden’ button opened it.

My dad bought such a camera – a Kodak Junior six-20 – around the time I was born. It was better than a box camera as the focus, aperture, and shutter could all be adjusted as necessary. Dad’s camera, carefully returned to its box and placed in a drawer of the dining room buffet, remains in like-new condition today.

While it looked much like the six-16 shown here (lot 336), it used the smaller size roll film and prints were usually enlarged a bit whereas the 616 roll film could be developed and contact printed to view or use on postcards.

The lot number refers to a lot in our first 2026 event, the February 15, 2026 auction (IMPORTANT: OUR AUCTION WAS RESCHEDULED TO FEB 15th DUE TO BAD WEATHER). Come out and join in the fun. You may even bid on something to add to your collection or your user gear!

Note: The post title is from Kenny Rogers’ epic 1978 song about the gambler. This is a song and singer my wife and I enjoyed back in the 1970s/80s.

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