Skip to main content

Agfa PD16 Clipper, 1928

 Item
Identifier: 2008-027-1-20-7

Scope and Contents

Metal bodied camera; takes 16 exposures on 616 roll film; retangular front section opens out from body; meniscus lens; single-speed shutter. Back jammed shut, cataloger could not open.

Dates

  • Creation: 1928

Creator

Access

This material is open for research use by any registered reader.

Biographical / Historical

The Agfa PD16 Clipper is one of the very first cameras produced by German company Agfa after its acquisition of the American company Ansco, thus forming Agfa-Ansco. Like the early offerings of many photographic company mergers, this camera was sold under both brands as the Agfa PD16 Clipper and the Ansco Clipper although it appears that they were all made in the very same American factory in Binghamton, NY.

The Clipper uses 616 film, a now discontinued medium format film. Although it is not a conventional folding camera, the Clipper employs a lens that must first be expanded before use. To do so, simply grab the two extended posts on either side of the lens plate and pull outward until two metal tabs click into place and lock the lens into shooting position. The lens itself is very simple and is pre-focused to cover everything from six feet to infinity. The self-cocking shutter is triggered by the small silver-colored lever next to the lens and has two speeds: 1/60 seconds and, if you pull out the small metal tab above the lens, bulb (shutter stays open as long as the shutter button is depressed). For composition, there is a flip-up viewfinder in the middle of the top plate positioned between the film advance and rewind knobs.

Extent

1 item (1 camera) : metal, glass ; 8 X 8 X 13 cm

Language of Materials

English

Repository Details

Part of the The University of Tulsa, McFarlin Library, Department of Special Collections & University Archives Repository

Contact:
McFarlin Library
University of Tulsa
2933 E. 6th St
Tulsa 74104-3123 USA
(918) 631-2496