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Concord's simplest 110 with a fixed shutter and aperture. Accepts a Flip-flash. BUT, it was available in different colors, anyway!
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A "delux" model of the 118, the 110EF adds an electronic flash -- hence the "EF". A switch on the top turns on the flash which uses 2 AAA batteries.
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Same as the 110EF, but came in NEON colors.
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A "delux" model of the 110EF, the 110TEF adds a selectable tele-photo lens -- hence the "TEF". A switch on the top chooses the lens.
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Same as the 110TEF, the 110CEF adds extra colors to choose from -- hence the "CEF", I guess. A switch on the top chooses the lens.
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A "delux" model of the 110CEF, the 110CEFT adds an extra letter to to the name -- hence the "CEFT". A switch on the top chooses the lens.
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A 110 for kids with just the very basics -- and a built-in flash which uses a battery, of course. It has a wrist strap and an ON/OFF switch for the flash -- what more could your
kid ask for, right? How about a flash ready light? You got it!!! The camera was undoubtedly sold
under other labels with different colors, but the name "Concord" does NOT appear on the camera -- only on the box. What are they trying to hide?
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It's a stripped-down Crayola FLASH -- without, you guessed it, a built-in flash.
It was also sold as the The Camera Bug 110 camera, except that the The Camera Bug was a red & white model
and the The Camera Bug accepts a Flip-Flash. The Crayola MINI has a space for the Flip-Flash connection
but it's just not there.
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It's a keychain camera in that the 110 cassette forms the back of the camera, and like other keychain cameras, it has a single shutter speed,
and a fixed-focus, fixed aperture lens.
What's different is that the Genesis II has a built-in viewfinder, and a built-in flash -- with an ON/OFF switch and even a ready light.
It uses a single AA battery. Same as the Argus Genesus II.