The Kodak Gem (1915-1920s) is a holy grail for vintage retouching artists and camera collectors. But unlike later Kodak products, the serial numbers on these brass beauties can be confusing.
Do you own one of these antique beauties? Drop the first 3 digits of your serial number in the comments! 👇
#KodakGem #VintageAirbrush #AntiqueTools #KodakCollector #AirbrushHistory #DarkroomMagic kodak gem airbrush serial number
Help dating a Kodak Gem Airbrush - Serial number inside
If you have a box, the serial number on the box must match the airbrush body to be considered "all original." The Kodak Gem (1915-1920s) is a holy grail
🔹 Most Kodak Gems have a serial number starting with "S" (e.g., S 12456). This likely stands for "Spray" or "Small."
#restoration #kodakgem
I’m trying to narrow down the manufacturing year. The serial number is .
🔹 Unlike cameras, Kodak did not release a public serial number-to-date chart for the Gem airbrush. The numbers were likely batch-specific. Drop the first 3 digits of your serial
"PSA for vintage airbrush hunters: Don't rely on a 'serial number decoder' for the Kodak Gem. They don't exist publicly. Instead, use the logo style (diamond vs rectangle) to date your Gem. The 'S' prefix just means 'spray.' #kodakgem #vintagetools" Unlike Kodak cameras (where you can date by lens board), the Gem airbrush was a third-party product (originally designed by Passche, sold by Kodak). Kodak treated serial numbers as internal inventory codes, not historical markers. Most records were destroyed after WWII.
🔹 Instead of a serial number lookup, use the logo : - Early (1915-1920): "Kodak" inside a diamond shape. - Late (1920s): "Kodak" in a simple rectangle.