Alma Four

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The Alma Four (アルマ・フォアー) is a Japanese camera taking 4×4cm pictures on 127 film, made by Miyoshi Kōgaku and distributed by Banno Bōeki from 1939 to 1943.[1]

Description

The Alma Four has a rounded metal body. There is a telescopic tube supporting the lens and shutter assembly. The top plate is removed for film loading, a practice that is common in Japanese 3×4 and 4×4 cameras and initiated by the Picny and Gelto.

The whole top plate is covered by a top housing containing the viewfinder, slightly offset to the left. This housing also supports the advance knob at the right end, an accessory shoe and a knob at the left end that looks like the rewind knob of a 35mm camera. This knob is perhaps used to open and close the top plate.

There is a small window in front of the accessory shoe, probably displaying an exposure counter. A lever placed behind the top plate perhaps interacts with this exposure counter. The back contains a single red window, protected by a horizontally sliding cover. It is certainly used to set the first exposure. There is a tripod thread in the bottom plate, offset to the right.

The name ALMA FOUR is engraved above the viewfinder and it is sometimes embossed in the back leather.

Advertising

In advertisements dated November 1940 and January 1941, two versions of the Alma Four were offered, both with a U.L.L. f/4.5 lens (the prices were only indicated in the January 1941 advertisement):[2]

The version with Kerio shutter is called Junior (ジュニアー型). The pictured camera is of the more expensive version. The shutter plate is marked ALMA at the top and probably SELON at the bottom. Both the Selon and the Kerio shutters were made by Miyoshi itself.

The camera was listed in the list of set prices compiled in October 1940 and published in January 1941, under the names "Alma Four Junior" (¥60), "Alma Four" (¥77) and "Alma Four III" (¥125), with no further details.[3] The Alma Four III probably has a better lens and shutter combination but it is otherwise unknown.

The Alma Four and Alma Four Junior were also mentioned in the "Kokusan shashinki no genjōchōsa" ("Inquiry into Japanese cameras"), listing the Japanese camera production as of April 1943.[4]

In an advertisement dated May 1943,[5] the camera was offered as the Alma Four New (アルマ・フォアー新型), but it seems that the picture is exactly the same as in the previous advertisement. The lens is the same U.L.L. f/4.5. Two versions were offered, for ¥77.70 with 1/25 low speed and ¥89.80 with 1/5 low speed. The shutters are probably the same Kerio and Selon but the shutter names and top speeds were not mentioned.

Actual examples

The Alma Four has been observed with a shutter giving 5–300, B, T speeds, probably corresponding to the Selon but with no marking on the shutter plate. On this version, the aperture is set by an index above the shutter housing.

It has also been observed with an everset Kerio shutter and a U.L.L. Anastigmat 5.0cm f/4.5 lens. This version corresponds to the advertised Alma Four Junior. The shutter plate is marked KERIO at the top and the aperture scale is at the bottom.

The Alma Four is also pictured in this page at Cameracatalogus with a Kerio shutter and a Ukas Anastigmat 50mm f/4.5 lens, of the type mounted on the Olympic. It is not known if this is an original fitting.

Notes

  1. Dates: advertisements mentioned in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 334. Attribution to Miyoshi: Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 334 and "Kokusan shashinki no genjōchōsa" ("Inquiry into Japanese cameras").
  2. Advertisements published in Asahi Camera November 1940, visible in this page of Xylocopal's photolog, and in Asahi Camera January 1941, reproduced in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 58. The two advertisements are nearly identical except for the mention of the price in January 1941.
  3. Template:Kakaku1940 short, type 1, sections 5, 7 and 10.
  4. "Kokusan shashinki no genjōchōsa" ("Inquiry into Japanese cameras"), items 149–50.
  5. Advertisement published in Shashin Shinpō, reproduced in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 59.

Bibliography

Links

In English:

In Japanese: