1940-1942 / Kodak Eastman Duex / Vintage Camera

The Kodak Duex is a compact, collapsible medium format viewfinder camera from the early 1940s, known for its distinctive bakelite body, screw-out helicoid lens barrel, and ability to capture 16 images per roll of 620 film.

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The Kodak Duex camera is a simple, medium format viewfinder camera manufactured by Eastman Kodak in Rochester, New York, from 1940 to 1942. Notable for its bakelite body and art-deco styling, the camera uses 620 roll film and produces 16 half-frame images sized 6×4.5cm per roll. Its distinctive collapsible lens features a fixed aperture of f/11 and two shutter speeds—Instant (about 1/30 sec.) and Bulb. Designed for snapshot photography, the Duex offers a tactile retractable lens barrel, a straightforward optical viewfinder, and a comfortable, lightweight build that was aimed at everyday consumers during its very brief production run.

Weight 380 kg
Dimensions 12.3 × 7 × 9.4 cm
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