Difference between revisions of "Ōfuna"

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'''Ofuna Optical Instrument Manufacturing Co Ltd''' (大船光学機械製作所, ''Ōfuna Kōgaku-Kikai Seisakusho'') marketed a total of four cameras after the second world war.
 
'''Ofuna Optical Instrument Manufacturing Co Ltd''' (大船光学機械製作所, ''Ōfuna Kōgaku-Kikai Seisakusho'') marketed a total of four cameras after the second world war.
  
The company originated during the war, when it started as a factory of [[Tomioka]] in Kamakura (the historic city, now effectively a distant southern suburb of Tokyo). Immediately to the north of Kamakura is the town of Ōfuna, which surely gave its name to the company. The factory produced binoculars and other military optics. Tomioka's main factory (in Yukigaya-Ōtsuka, Tokyo) was destroyed by bombing toward the end of the war, and when the war ended Tomioka moved to a western outer suburb of Tokyo. Its Kamakura factory, which had escaped unscathed, raised capital independently and became a separate company.
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The company originated during the war, when it started as a factory of [[Tomioka]] in Kamakura (the historic city, now effectively a distant southern suburb of Tokyo). Immediately to the north of Kamakura is the town of Ōfuna, which surely gave its name to the company. The factory produced binoculars and other military optics. Tomioka's main factory (in Yukigaya-Ōtsuka, Tokyo) was destroyed by bombing toward the end of the war, and when the war ended Tomioka moved to a western outer suburb of Tokyo. Its Kamakura factory, which had escaped unscathed, raised capital independently and became a separate company.
  
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== Camera list ==
 
* [[Herlight]]
 
* [[Herlight]]
 
* [[Ofunaflex]]
 
* [[Ofunaflex]]
 
* [[Ofuna Six]] (non-coupled rangefinder)
 
* [[Ofuna Six]] (non-coupled rangefinder)
 
* [[Ofuna Six]] (coupled rangefinder)
 
* [[Ofuna Six]] (coupled rangefinder)
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 +
== Other ==
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* E-Ofunar 7.5cm f/3.5 enlarging lens
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* E-Ofunar 5cm f/3.5 enlarging lens
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 +
== Notes ==
 +
<references />
  
 
== Source / further reading ==
 
== Source / further reading ==
 +
* Hagiya Takeshi (萩谷剛). "Ōfuna Kōgaku no kamera: Kamera kara kōgaku heiki e" (大船光学のカメラ:カメラから光学兵器へ, The cameras of Ōfuna Kōgaku: From cameras to military optics). Chapter 8 of {{Zunow10}}
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== Links ==
 
In Japanese:
 
In Japanese:
* Hagiya Takeshi (萩谷剛). "Ōfuna Kōgaku no kamera: Kamera kara kōgaku heiki e" (大船光学のカメラ:カメラから光学兵器へ, The cameras of Ōfuna Kōgaku: From cameras to military optics). Chapter 8 of {{Zunow10}}
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* [http://blog.livedoor.jp/united3arrows/archives/51212433.html Advertisement by Ofuna] dated 1954, reproduced in [http://blog.livedoor.jp/united3arrows/ Shashin-Bako], showing E-Ofunar enlarging lenses
  
 
[[Category: Japanese camera makers]]
 
[[Category: Japanese camera makers]]
 
[[Category: Japanese lens makers]]
 
[[Category: Japanese lens makers]]

Revision as of 00:14, 18 April 2008

Ofuna Optical Instrument Manufacturing Co Ltd (大船光学機械製作所, Ōfuna Kōgaku-Kikai Seisakusho) marketed a total of four cameras after the second world war.

The company originated during the war, when it started as a factory of Tomioka in Kamakura (the historic city, now effectively a distant southern suburb of Tokyo). Immediately to the north of Kamakura is the town of Ōfuna, which surely gave its name to the company. The factory produced binoculars and other military optics. Tomioka's main factory (in Yukigaya-Ōtsuka, Tokyo) was destroyed by bombing toward the end of the war, and when the war ended Tomioka moved to a western outer suburb of Tokyo. Its Kamakura factory, which had escaped unscathed, raised capital independently and became a separate company.

Camera list

Other

  • E-Ofunar 7.5cm f/3.5 enlarging lens
  • E-Ofunar 5cm f/3.5 enlarging lens

Notes


Source / further reading

  • Hagiya Takeshi (萩谷剛). "Ōfuna Kōgaku no kamera: Kamera kara kōgaku heiki e" (大船光学のカメラ:カメラから光学兵器へ, The cameras of Ōfuna Kōgaku: From cameras to military optics). Chapter 8 of Zunō kamera tanjō: Sengo kokusan kamera jū monogatari (ズノーカメラ誕生:戦後国産カメラ10物語, The birth of the Zunow camera: Ten stories of postwar Japanese camera makers). Tokyo: Asahi Sonorama, 1999. ISBN 4-257-12023-1.

Links

In Japanese: