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The Okaya Lord 4D is a 35mm fixed lens rangefinder introduced in 1956 by Okaya Optical Works of Nagano, Japan. It is fitted with a 40mm / f2.8 Highkor lense and a Seikosha MXL shutter.

The Lord 4D has some interesting and unique features for its time : a semi-wide lens with a hyperfocal distance lock, and a built-in film cutter.

The Okaya Lord 5D is the same chassis fitted with a semi wide-angle 40mm / f1.9 Highkor lens, (Okaya’s own) and Seikōsha MXL leaf shutter. Despite that the Okaya Lord 5D is more common, it remains a virtually unknown compact 35mm coupled-rangefinder camera from the Okaya Optical Co., Ltd. Okaya Optical was the extinct Japanese manufacturer of "Lord" rangefinder 35mm cameras, "Vista" binoculars and opera glasses, rifle scopes, and other optical products from 1953 to 1959. Okaya Optical was headquartered in Tokyo with production in Okaya City, Nagano Prefecture.

Okaya's cameras were distributed in the Japanese domestic market by K. Hattori & Co., Ltd. (now Seiko Corporation) and imported into the U.S. by Allied Impex Corporation in New York City. All of its cameras were branded “Lord” with “Okaya Optic” logo appearing on some lens caps or subtly debossed into vinyl chassis coverings.

Despite Okaya’s camera’s differentiated features and superior build quality, they suffered a lack of market awareness that conspired to make them quite rare and the cameras were apparently never distributed in markets outside Japan and the U.S.

Lord 5D Ad

Introduced in 1957, the Lord 5D exudes quality and is extremely well built and finished. It offers good optical performance with reasonable contrast from its semi wide-angle 40mm f1.9 Highkor lens, coupled with excellent mechanical performance in a solid chassis. The Lord 5D is fitted with a host of unique technical innovations that might have helped differentiate it in the crowded marketspace of the late 1950’s if Okaya had been able to garner any market visibility for their cameras.

Unfortunately for Okaya, their US importer Allied Impex Corporation barely did any advertising for the marque, and was apparently unsuccessful to get product placement reviews with popular photography periodicals of the day. AIC was fully engaged promoting their own Soligor brand name for cameras and lenses imported from Japan and imported the Miranda line of cameras until AIC actually took one hundred percent control of the Miranda company at some time in the late 1960s; (AIC subsequently went bankrupt in 1976). It seems that AIC was largely inactive with Okaya’s cameras.


Key/Unique Features Include:

• 40 mm Highkor f/1.9 triplet lens with lens with bayonet filter thread, delivers good optical performance.


• Seiko Seikosha MXL leaf shutter offers three possible flash sync speeds: M, F, X. ‘M’ pre-ignites the flash 20

Seikosha MXL Shutter

Seikosha MXL Shutter

milliseconds before the shutter is fully open, ‘F’ pre-ignites the flash 5 milliseconds before the shutter is fully open and ‘X’ ignites the flash when the shutter is fully open.


• Bright, clear viewfinder with easy to see, blue-tint RF spot and fixed framelines with parallax compensation marks.


• With two strokes of the film advance lever, the shutter release button pops up showing a red band to indicate the shutter is loaded

IMG 1279


• Unusual that the filter mount is a Bay41 bayonet mount







• Okaya claimed it was the only camera with “Snapshot Lock” that is actually a hyperfocal distance lock button that limits the rotation of the lens helicoid to be able to shot middle distances without focusing

IMG 1282
IMG 1278


• Multiple exposure capability: after the first exposure, pressing the rewind button on the bottom of the camera disengages the film drive sprocket such that the film does not advance as the film advance lever is cocked to reload the shutter. After the second exposure, the film drive sprocket is reengaged by pressing a rewind release button on the rear face of the camera below the shutter film advance lever


• Built-in film cutter, (much like early Exakta cameras from East Germany). The idea was that you didn't need to wait to expose the roll but just cut the exposed part, take it out and have it developed. Of course you needed to do this in a darkroom. Perhaps this made sense in early days when 35mm film was rare and expensive, but in 1957 when the camera was released, this no longer made much sense

• The camera uses black yarn light seals that never require replacement

Lord Accessories


          • Standard accessories include a push-on lens cap and owner’s manual  • Attractive, reliable and easy to use

Minus Points Include:

• Lacks exposure control system


• Two-stroke film advance lever


• Lens rendering tends to be somewhat soft


• Cold shoe for flash


• Odd-sized, unique bayonet mounted lens hood and filters are impossibly rare


• Lens is prone to flare


• Uncommon in its day, a Lord 5D is quite difficult to find.



Links

In French:

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