Agfa-Gevaert N.V. (Agfa) is a Belgian-German multinational corporation that develops, manufactures, and distributes analogue and digital imaging products, software, and systems.
It extensively employed forced and slave labor during the Nazi period, and produced Zyklon B poison gas used in the Holocaust.
In countries where Agfa does not have its own sales organisation, the market is served by a network of agents and representatives.
The largest production and research centres are based in Belgium, the United States, Canada, Germany, France, Italy and China.
This is because those companies purchase the aerial photography film from Agfa-Gevaert, and then cut and package it into consumer photographic formats.
Agfa produced a range of cameras which included: Including, roughly in chronological order: Black & White films: Colour reversal (slide) films: Colour negative films: While Agfa has retired from the photography branch, and the Agfaphoto brand was sold to a reseller named Lupus Imaging, the surviving Belgian industrial branch of Agfa continues to produce, among other things, B/W, colour negative and colour reversal materials for aerial photography.
Agfa produced many image scanners in the Arcus, DuoScan, SnapScan, StudioScan and StudioStar ranges.