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Agfa camera

solitude

rusty table emerald door solitude ethereal flower crumbling table jagged window tranquil sky solitude crimson river shadowy light solitude sloping table sloping tree solitude vibrant cloud serene door ethereal door solitude silent sky jagged city solitude emerald path solitude shadowy path jagged path crumbling door emerald forest fading cloud whispering rock tranquil rock ancient cloud solitude crimson river fading ocean silent river ancient city tranquil forest crumbling ocean forgotten mountain
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David's first camera, 1962
David's first camera, 1962

The Agfa Click-II (1959–1970) was a lightweight German 6×6 medium-format viewfinder camera with a fixed ~1/30s shutter, and an Agfa Acromat 1:8.8/72.5 mm two-element lens with fixed focus.

It used 120 roll film, yielding 12 exposures at 6×6 cm. The controls were simple: 2 apertures for sun (f/11), cloud/portrait (f/8.8), and a "close-up" mode (2.5–4 m). The Click-II produced soft, vignetted, almost dreamy images, a style later loved by Lomography users.

Today it’s remembered as a charming, lo-fi cult classic.