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Not much movie watchin' goin' on there!!!
When I was in SF a few months ago I ate at Mel's 'next generation' on Lombard st. Complete with table juke boxes too!!
Neat!When I was in SF a few months ago I ate at Mel's 'next generation' on Lombard st. Complete with table juke boxes too!!
Got one of those!! It's a real beast.I've posted these in another thread, having forgotten completely about this thread.
I initially thought that this dated to some time in the 1970s, but apparently, this model was made form 1972 until 2001, and the one that I have appears, based on my tentative interpretation of information given to me by a Milwaukee representative, to have been manufactured in May of 1989. So, not quite the antique that I thought it was, but still old enough to qualify as “vintage”.
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Unfortunately I remember that one well... Quit when I was 24, and never looked back
Had forgotten that one .. wow that's just cool..
You know alot about it. Does that mean this is fake or just old and rare? I know whatever you say is correct because you are an avid Photographer.No 35mm/135?
Just doing a quick bit of Googling, to see of there was ever a time when the 620, 120, and 127 formats existed, and 135 did not.
Very short. 135 was introduced in 1934, and fairly quickly grew to become by far the most popular film format. 120 and 127 had been around for a long time, by then, but 620 came out in 1932, just a couple years ahead of 135.
135, of course, fairly quickly caught on, and became by far the most popular film format ever; boosted in 1939 by the Argus C3, which itself became one of the most popular cameras ever made.
So really, there's only a very narrow window in time when this vending machine would have made sense—after the 620 format came out in 1932, but not very far past the point where 135 came out in 1934, and quickly became more popular than any of the formats offered by this machine.
You know alot [sic] about it. Does that mean this is fake or just old and rare? I know whatever you say is correct because you are an avid Photographer.
Anyway, I watched a documentary about a nanny who was a secret photographer. She had thousands of undevelope [sic] film and someone got it from buying an unpaid storage or something like that it's been years seen I watched it. But she had amazing photos. What a great find! Did you do film developing in school? I remember in school they used to have that.