
<p>Remember when Kodak created its first commercial camera, a nifty invention that boasted the slogan "You Press the Button, We Do the Rest"?</p><p>Woman in a rowing boat, about 1890. Collection of National Media Museum/Kodak Museum</p><p>You probably don't, because this feat happened 125 years ago when George Eastman introduced the second Kodak camera ever made. The contraption looked almost nothing like the devices we're used to, but it brought photography into the homes of everyday people with, well, the press of a button. And a fairly reasonable price of $25 -- a cost that amounts to around $600 today, according to Design Taxi.</p><p>Thanks to a little UK-based institution known as the National Media Museum, we're able to look back on history and peruse some of the very first amateur photographs ever taken. Snapped with the Kodak No. 1 (the first Kodak camera was simply named "Kodak"), the images provide a striking, black-and-white glimpse into life in the 1890s.</p><p><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/02/kodak-no-1_n_4025737.html">Keep reading...</a></p>