Kodak - Lens cleaning kit
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| List Price: | $9.95 |
| Price: | $1.99 |
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Ships from and sold by Adorama Camera
Product Description
Through the years, Kodak has led the way with an abundance of new products and processes that have made photography simpler, more useful and more enjoyable. Today, the company's work increasingly involves digital technology, combining the power and convenience of electronics with the quality of traditional photography to produce systems that bring levels of utility and fun to the taking, "making" and utilization of images.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #12985 in Consumer Electronics
- Brand: Kodak
- Dimensions: .10 pounds
Features
- High wet strength
- Extremely soft and non-abrasive
- Meets government lens paper specifications; Type 1, Class 1 product Specification AA-50177
Customer Reviews
not as advertised-- but highly recommended
First thing there is no "kit"-- it simply is a package of lens cleaning tissues. Secondly, this is not a Kodak product-- nowhere on the packaging does the trade name "Kodak" appear. The image that appears in the Amazon product description is not representative of the delivered product. The outer package is light gray and exhibits the Tiffen product name. In a side by side comparison with the Kodak product that I have, the copy that appears on the front and back of the outer package is exactly the same, word for word. The quality and texture of the tissue itself is the same as well as the quantity of tissues per pack (50 sheets). All this leads me to believe that the products are identical, except for the packaging.
Now a note on lens cleaning: Who came up with the idea of using microfiber cloths for cleaning lenses? First thing, there is a tremendous difference in the quality and materials used in microfiber cloths. They are not all the same. Are you going to risk using a cloth that attracts dirt like a magnet to clean an expensive Leica or Zeiss lens? Are you really going to wash it after each use? And what effect do the detergent and water deposits left behind have on the lens and optical coatings? Microfiber cloths may be useful for cleaning inexpensive lenses, but I certainly wouldn't risk potential damage to a $3,000 lens. These cloths are good for cleaning all lens and camera surfaces except the lens glass.
To use this product: Always blow any foreign material from the lens surface with a high quality blower like the Giottos Rocket blower or similar product. Then using a high quality, clean retractable lens cleaning brush, lightly sweep the lens surface. Blow off the lens brush with the blower after sweeping and before storing. Take one sheet of the lens tissue and fold it in half two times. Apply one or two drops of a high quality lens cleaning solution like Zeiss or a similar product to the lens tissue. (Kodak used to make a quality solution which I have been unable to find recently, so if you know of a source, please leave a comment.) Starting in the center of the lens, clean in a circular motion until you reach the outer edge. Repeat if necessary, then buff lightly with another clean, folded tissue.
With all that said, and despite the inaccuracies of the product description and image, this is a superior lens cleaning product that will not compromise or degrade the quality of any lens made.
Worth $2
These tissues work very well for cleaning coated lenses. They are not re-usable, one lens and then throw it away.
Other people who have purchased this have complained about the packaging. Tiffen has always made the tissues for Kodak, as well as Kodak's Wratten glass and gelatin filters. Kodak discontinued this product but Tiffen continued to make them under their own name. It is the same tissue as before, and it works very well.
Kodak - Lens Cleaning Kit
Tiffen is the company that made the Kodak Lens Tissue in the yellow slip cover that we all knew and loved. Evidently Tiffen no longer has the license to sell this product under the Kodak name - hence the reason you see the Tiffen brand on the box.
It is true, there is no other way to clean a lens correctly than with lens tissue. The new microfiber cloths that all of the chain photo stores are now carrying can create a false sense of security and lead to acratching of your lenses.





