A Secret About a Secret is a photograph by Edward Fielding which was uploaded on December 22nd, 2012.
A Secret About a Secret
A picture is a secret about a secret, the more it tells you the less you know. ... more
Title
A Secret About a Secret
Artist
Edward Fielding
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
A picture is a secret about a secret, the more it tells you the less you know.
― Diane Arbus
Photography of vintage Kodak Brownie Flash Six-10 camera by Edward M. Fielding
The Kodak Brownie Flash Six-20 Camera featured: built-in flash for use with accessory Flashholder, Both instantaneous and bulb shutter settings, sharp meniscus lens with 2-position focusing, smart, eye-level, enclosed optical view finder, sturdy all-metal body; black pin-grain covering, takes black and white or full-color pictures.
Negative size was 2 1/4 x 3 1/4 inches.
Type: Solid body eyelevel rollfilm
Introduced: Jul 1946
Discontinued: Jan 1955
Film size: 620
Picture size: 2 1/4 X 3 1/4"
Manufactured: US
Lens: Meniscus
Shutter: Rotary
Numbers made: ?
Original price: $6.00
Description:
Metal box body; optical direct vision finder;
accepts cumbersome flashgun.
Renamed from Six-20 Flash Brownie Camera.
The Kodak Six-20 Flash Brownie was made in the USA by Kodak; it was a flash synchronised version of the Kodak Six-20 Brownie Special. It had a sheet-metal body, which could mount a large, unwieldy bulb flashgun. Exposures were 6x9 on 620 film.
Kodak introduced it in December 1940, for a price of $4.25. It was renamed "Brownie Flash Six-20" in 1946, at which time the price went up to $5.90.
Diane Arbus - Diane Arbus (pron.: /diːˈ�n ˈɑrbəs/; March 14, 1923 � July 26, 1971) was an American photographer and writer noted for black-and-white square photographs of "deviant and marginal people (dwarfs, giants, transgender people, nudists, circus performers) or of people whose normality seems ugly or surreal." Diane believed that a camera could be �a little bit cold, a little bit harsh� but its scrutiny revealed the truth; the difference between what people wanted others to see and what they really did see � the flaws. A friend said that Arbus said that she was "afraid . . . that she would be known simply as 'the photographer of freaks'"; however, that phrase has been used repeatedly to describe her.
Uploaded
December 22nd, 2012
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