His camera is 100 years old...

I have not seen it before. It is really interesting and worth a few minutes of anyone's time.

Dave
 
Now that's dedication
 
Love that the chemicals ar actually in the camera. Amazing.
 
What a thought provoking video.

The camera reminds me of the old wet process photographers that went round in a horse drawn wagon which was their darkroom. The man in the video have a lovely (locally made?) equivalent of an 'instant camera'. Simply wonderful :)
 
Very humbling. Thanks for posting this link.
 
"Excellent" Bob, thanks for posting.

George.
 
This is cool.
Not sure if it's been posted already...

View: https://youtu.be/I_gYuoOZIgU
Great find. In 1957I had my first passport photo made with an essentially similar camera & process, whipping off the lens cover in lieu of a shutter etc. The photo was (and is) greenish. On the Main Street, Tawahi, Aden Colony :), I’d gone there without needing a passport of course but thanks to “Suez” had to take a different route back to U.K. :(.
 
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Does that count as an instant camera?
If so, that thing's beaten Polaroid by nearly 50 years. View attachment 301038
Ah hmmmm! Post #7 ;)
The first photography I did with my Folding Kodak Brownie was printing in a frame on a sunny window sill (it was always sunny back then :)) using daylight paper(I think properly called ‘printing out paper’) so halfway to Polaroid.

There are still people doing that horse and cart thing but with vans — isn’t there a man who has adapted the whole van to be the camera?

However, I think the nicest thing about the original video is that the camera looks to have been knocked up from bits of spare wood:). Oh, and the fact that it is in Afghanistan! I remember seeing an article somewhere about an Afghan photographer during the Taliban rule who specialised in portraits of Taliban Fedayeen and their ‘boyfriends‘ in their best attire:).
 
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