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Tokiwa plate folders
The Tokiwa or Tokiwa Camera (トキワカメラ) are Japanese plate folders distributed by Mizuno Shashinki-ten in the mid-1930s. Many recent sources say that the Tokiwa were made by Kuribayashi -
Mikuni
Mikuni has double extension bellows driven by a focusing wheel on the photographer's right. The split folding struts were perhaps copied on Contessa-Nettel designs, such as the Adoro. There is a distance scale -
Primarette
bellows, one for viewing and one for taking. There was a choice of taking lens, including a Meyer Trioplan 75mm f3.5, set in a Compur shutter speeded from 1s to 1/300, or a -
Dollina
The Dollina is a series of 35mm folding cameras produced by the German maker Certo based in Dresden. There were three generations of Dollina, each with a different body. The Dollina II was a more -
Patent Etui
The Patent Etui are extra-slim folding plate cameras, they were manufactured in two sizes 9×12cm and 6.5×9cm by KW Kamera Werkstätten Guthe& Thorsch of Dresden between 1920 and 1938. Although originally -
Hapo 45
This article is a stub. You can help Camerapedia.org by expanding it. The Hapo 45 is a roll film camera that was produced for Porst by Balda in 1937. -
Baldina
The Baldina was a 35mm folding viewfinder camera made by Balda in Dresden, Germany, before World War II. Introduced in 1935, the Baldina bore a strong resemblance to both the Welta Welti of the same -
Welta Weltax
Weltax is a medium format film folding camera made by Welta and introduced in 1938. Its production resumed in 1947. Around 1956, some Weltax cameras production was made by VEB Rheinmetall, engraved with their name -
Welti
File:2449554881 26e727241c.jpg The Welti is a 35mm folding viewfinder camera made by Welta from 1935 through the 1960s. It is one of a confusing family of nearly identical cameras that also include the -
Perfekta (TLR)
There is also a Bakelite Perfekta 6x6 viewfinder camera made by VEB Rheinmetall. The Perfekta TLR was made by Welta in 1934. It was the successor of the Superfekta. It has a peculiar folding design -
Baldaxette
The Baldaxette was a coupled-rangefinder folding camera launched by the German company Balda in the mid-1930s. The Baldaxette I (1936) was the 4.5×6 version and the Baldaxette II (1937) the 6 -
Baldax
to the 6x6cm 1932 model camera in the gallery) Film: 120 roll film, picture size 6x6cm Lens: Meyer Görlitz Trioplan 7.8cm f/4.5 Aperture: f/4.5 - f/22, no click stops, setting -
Meyer
Template:Görlitz Meyer was a German optical company, founded by Hugo Meyer (born 21.05.1863, died 01.03.1905) in Görlitz. -
Kinka plate folders
and Semi Kinka. The original Kinka has a mixed body with a wooden rear casing and metal folding bed. There are small folding struts with a peculiar shape, double extension bellows driven by a small -
Nifca and Molta plate folders
Nichidoku Shashinki Shōten, later Molta Gōshi-gaisha then Chiyoda Kōgaku Seikō (the predecessors of Minolta), made a series of 6.5×9cm folding bed plate cameras from 1930 to the war. These are the Nifcaklapp -
Minifex
The Minifex was a German subminiature camera made in the 1930s by Fotofex, a company founded by Fritz Kaftanski. In July of 1934 Kaftanski founded the Minifex GmbH and transferred at least one patent right -
Wirgin Edinex series
The Edinex viewfinder cameras for 35mm film were made by Gebr. Wirgin in Wiesbaden. The first model was certainly introduced in the mid-1930s. The same camera was also sold by Adox as the Adrette -
Reflecta
is done separately by a small, red-eyed lever. Other variants have a Brillant Anastigmat 7.5 cm ƒ4.5 lens in a Compur shutter that has B, T, 1second - 1/100 and 1/300. -
Beier Beirette series
Kamerafabrik Woldemar Beier KG - Freital, partially private East German company, Year of launch: 1958, Film: 35mm, Lens: Meyer Trioplan 1:3.5/45mm or Ludwig Meritar 1:2.8/45mm, Shutter: Junior-II, Modell II -
Belca Beltica
The Beltica was a folding camera for 35mm film, one of the first products of the East German VEB Belca-Werk, the former plant of Balda-Werk Max Baldeweg in Dresden. The distance selection wheel -
Symbol and Trio
The Symbol and Trio are 6×9 folding cameras using 120 film, made in the 1930s by the German company Welta. The two models are very similar, and mainly differ by the lens and shutter -
Belca Belfoca II
Belfoca II is a medium format film folding camera made by Belca-Werk (Balda) and after 1957 made by Welta, originally introduced in 1956. This camera is a rare one. It is similar Belfoca I -
Palma plate folders
The Palma (パルマー) or S.Y.K Palma are Japanese folding cameras taking film plates. They were distributed and perhaps made by Kyūreidō in the late 1920s and early 1930s. The initials -
Zeiss Ikon
Goerz, had to shut down their own lens manufacture. The merged company was also obliged to use Compur shutters for 80% of its cameras. Thus only the simplest cameras could get cheaper shutters like the -
Belca Belfoca
The Belfoca was a popular medium format folding camera for type No. 120 rollfilm, made by Belca and after 1957 made by Welta, and produced between c.1950-59. With the presentation of the new
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