Kinax
French | ( | )|
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companies | ||
AFR | Alsaphot | André and Lieutier | Angénieux | Arca Swiss | As de Trèfle | Atoms | Aubertin | Balcar | Bardin | Bauchet | Baudry | Bellieni | Berthiot | Boumsell | Boyer | Bronzavia | Cindo | Cord | Cornu | Coronet | Darlot | Demaria-Lapierre | Derogy | Faller | FAP | Fex | Français | Compagnie Française de Photographie | Gallus | Gaumont | Georges Paris | Girard | Gitzo | Goldstein | Héard & Mallinjod | Hermagis | Idam | Itier | Jousset | Joux | Kafta | Kinax | Kodak Pathé | Krauss | Lumière | Lund | Mackenstein | Manufrance | MAPED | Mazo | MFAP | MIOM | Mollier | Mundus | Olbia | Omega | OPL | Pierrat | Richard | Richard (Jules) | Roussel | Royer | SEM | Secam | SIAP | Soulé | Spirotechnique | Tiranty | Vergne | Zion (France) |
Kinax was a French camera maker from the late 1940s to about 1956. It was part of the group Etablissements Jousset and continued the group's camera branch. They made mainly 6x9 folders and put their name on a couple of 6x6 TLRs and a stereo camera using 120 film.
Contents
6x9 folding
- Kinax Baby
- Kinax Cadet
- Kinax Junior
- Kinax I
- Kinax II
- Kinax III
- Kinax Major
- Super Kinax
- Super Kinax III
6x6 TLR
- Babyflex
- Kinaflex
Stereo
- Kinax 3D
Links
- Kinax cameras at Sylvain Halgand's site: many pages, extensively detailed, you can start with the Kinax chronology
- Kinax page at amaryllis
- Kinax page at Collection G. Even's site
- Kinax in "The Old Album" [1]