Summary

'Clack' box camera manufactured by AGFA (Aktien-Gesellschaft für Anilin-Fabrikation), Germany, circa 1954.
It takes 6cm × 9cm pictures on 120 film and is in its original brown plastic carry case with shoulder strap.

The history of AGFA goes back to 1867, when the company Aktiengesellschaft für Anilinfabrikation (Aniline Production Corporation) was founded in Berlin, Germany. Aniline merged with L. Gevaert & Cie, a company founded in 1894 in Antwerp, Belgium and specialising in the manufacture of photographic paper. The AFGA trade mark first appeared in 1897. By then the firm was manufacturing X-ray plates and photographic film products and soon after, in 1903, it began producing 35mm motion film stock.

The company went through many changes as a result of mergers with other companies, most notably with Bayer in 1925. Agfa-Gevaert withdrew from the photographic film and camera manufacturing market in 2004.

Physical Description

Moulded, black plastic boxlike camera with fixed circular lens located on the front, viewfinder and top mounted winding dial. In its original plastic carry case and shoulder strap.

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