Toronto. On my 25th birthday, my sister, gave me a copy of Cooper’s 1958 ULTRA-miniature photography book as a present, so when George Dunbar sent me a January 1947 LIFE ad for Whittaker’s Micro 16 camera, I tracked down the book in my bookcase.
No luck looking in the book. Cooper did not show the Micro 16 camera. A browse on the web and I discovered why. The Micro 16 was made from 1946/7 to 1950 when it disappeared from the marketplace.
The Whittaker factory was based in Hollywood, California and made aircraft parts during the war. Afterwards the little company branched out. The Micro 16s were machined from small blocks of aluminum and while little more than cheap box cameras, their size made them initially attractive to police and detectives. The Micro 16 could fit into an American cigarette package! Continue reading

















