WWII Camera Help

Kaylore

Suspended / Banned
Messages
5
Edit My Images
No
I have a camera that belonged to my Grandfather. He used it to take pictures during his tour of duty in WWII. I'd like to know more about it but am coming up empty in my research so I thought maybe it was German made & he picked it up during the war? It's small, black, with no flash & a flip up view finder. It has Nori Optik 1:8=35mm written around the outside of the lens & the name Nori on the camera itself. Anyone know anything about it?
 
cjay...That looks almost identical to it. I have no idea where it was made. I never knew about the camera until it was too late to ask my Grandpa about it. All my Grandma & Mom know is he had it during WWII. I'll try to take & post some pics of it 1 day when I have time. Thanks for posting the pic you found & for the translation. :)
 
cjay...I went back & looked at the camera pics on that site closer...That is the exact camera I have only not in as good of shape (my view finder is more scratched up & the writing around the lens has all the color worn off) & has a different case.

I have a possibly dumb question...Any guesses what kind of film it would take? It says 35mm on the camera?
 
Last edited:
I have a possibly dumb question...Any guesses what kind of film it would take? It says 35mm on the camera?

It looks like a 120 film (Medium format) still readily available

McShug
 
It looks like a 120 film (Medium format) still readily available

McShug
It does look like roll film but it's not 120, look at that second picture on Flickr where it's next to an Ektachrome 35mm (at least I think 35mm) film box. It's something much smaller.
 
Last edited:
It does look like roll film but it's not 120, look at that second picture on Flickr where it's next to an Ektachrome 35mm (at least I think 35mm) film box. It's something much smaller.

If the camera is a Brownie-alike, 127 film would fit.

C
 
It sounds like 127, which was a very common format at the time, or maybe 620.
 
The info i have in a book is that it took 25x 25 photos on 35mm roll film, early version had a flip up view finder, later ones had a rigid optical finder.
made from 1935.
a post war version was later sold by photoprint ag as the "Ernos"

Hope this helps:)
 
Wow, thank you all for the help. I appreciate it. :) Mine is exactly like the 1 cjay posted a pic of (with the flip up view finder) the other day so it must be a 1935-36 model then? I should try to find film & try it out sometime maybe....
 
I love stories like this! Just think of the history that camera has seen. Maybe your gran has some photos that he may have taken with it?
whateevr you do, you must keep it. :thumbs:


Kev.
 
Kev...No worries I plan on keeping it for sure. :) I was just curious as to its origins. I can only imagine all the history it's seen (and taken pictures of!)
 
Back
Top