Difference between revisions of "Cooky 35 and Robin 35"

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|| ''Cooky 35 in {{FAR}} December 1949. {{public domain Japan new}}''
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The '''Cooky 35''' (クッキー35)<REF> {{SUG}}, item 3223, says in the Japanese text that the name was spelled クッケィ, but the advertisement reproduced in {{Kokusan}}, p.135, has クッキー. </REF> is a Japanese viewfinder camera for [[35mm film]], made by [[Kashiwa|Kashiwa Seikō]] in 1949–50 and noted for its small size.
 
The '''Cooky 35''' (クッキー35)<REF> {{SUG}}, item 3223, says in the Japanese text that the name was spelled クッケィ, but the advertisement reproduced in {{Kokusan}}, p.135, has クッキー. </REF> is a Japanese viewfinder camera for [[35mm film]], made by [[Kashiwa|Kashiwa Seikō]] in 1949–50 and noted for its small size.
  
 
== Description ==
 
== Description ==
The Cooky 35 takes fifty 24×26mm exposures on standard perforated [[35mm film]] in regular cassettes.<REF> Advertisement reproduced in {{Kokusan}}, p.135. </REF> The viewfinder is at the middle of the top plate, in a small casing extending to the right, as seen by the photographer. The name ''C<small>OOKY 35</small>'' is engraved above the viewfinder, together with the mention ''PATENT KASHIWASEIKO''.
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The Cooky 35 takes fifty 24×26mm exposures on standard perforated [[35mm film]] in regular cassettes.<REF> Advertisement reproduced in {{Kokusan}}, p.135. </REF> The viewfinder is on the middle of the top plate, in a small casing extending to the right, as seen by the photographer.
  
The back comes off together with the bottom plate for film loading. The film cartridge is loaded into the right-hand compartment, and there is a large pressure plate hinged to the bottom of the main body. The advance knob is at the top left, and is covered by a patch of leatherette. The rewind switch is placed next to the advance knob, to the left of the viewfinder. There is a lever on the rear, next to the viewfinder eyepiece, probably used to unlock the advance manually after each exposure. The exposure counter is made of two discs: a smaller one graduated from 0 to 5, for tens, and a larger one from 0 to 9, for units. These are placed above the casing on the viewfinder's right, next to the shutter release.
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The back comes off together with the bottom plate for film loading. The film cartridge is loaded into the right-hand compartment, and there is a large pressure plate hinged to the bottom of the main body. The advance knob is at the top left, covered by a patch of leatherette. A lever is visible on the rear, next to the viewfinder eyepiece, probably for manual unlock of the film advance after each exposure. The exposure counter is made of two discs: a smaller one graduated from 0 to 5, for tens, and a larger one from 0 to 9, for units. These are placed above the casing on the viewfinder's right, next to the shutter release.
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There is a lever next to the advance knob, to the left of the viewfinder, with a letter ''R'' engraved nearby, most probably a rewind switch. The camera has no dedicated rewind knob, but there is not enough internal room for a take-up film cartridge, and it seems that the advance knob is used for rewind too. The details of how this is achieved are unclear, but a contemporary description mentions a new pattern for film advance and rewind.<REF> Column in {{FAR}} December 1949, p.39: フィルム捲返し装置は本機の新考案. </REF>
  
 
The leaf shutter, placed behind the lens, gives 100, 50, 25, B speeds, seemingly selected by a lever at the top. Another lever is visible on the left, surely to cock the shutter. The release linkage is also visible at the right of the barrel, to the bottom. The lens is fixed and front-cell focusing; it is either a Cooky Runer Anastigmat 40mm f/2.8 or a Cooky Zephyr Anastigmat 40mm f/3.5. On the cameras having the Runer, the aperture is adjustable to 22 by turning a ring around the barrel.
 
The leaf shutter, placed behind the lens, gives 100, 50, 25, B speeds, seemingly selected by a lever at the top. Another lever is visible on the left, surely to cock the shutter. The release linkage is also visible at the right of the barrel, to the bottom. The lens is fixed and front-cell focusing; it is either a Cooky Runer Anastigmat 40mm f/2.8 or a Cooky Zephyr Anastigmat 40mm f/3.5. On the cameras having the Runer, the aperture is adjustable to 22 by turning a ring around the barrel.
  
The case is made of brown leather and is embossed ''C<small>OOKY 35</small>'' at the front.<REF> Case observed in an online auction. </REF>
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The name ''C<small>OOKY 35</small>'' is engraved above the viewfinder, together with the mention ''PATENT KASHIWASEIKO''. No body number is visible on the cameras. The name ''C<small>OOKY 35</small>'' is repeated at the front of the brown leather case.<REF> Case observed in an online auction. </REF>
  
 
== Commercial life and known examples ==
 
== Commercial life and known examples ==
The Cooky 35 was advertised and featured in Japanese magazines from July 1949 to March 1950. The December 1949 advertisement in {{FAR}} mentions the Zephyr f/3.5 lens only, and gives no price.<REF> Advertisement reproduced in {{Kokusan}}, p.135. The lens name is spelled ゼファー. </REF>
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{| class="plainlinks" align="center" style="text-align: center;"
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|| [http://www.flickr.com/photos/rebollo_fr/2846309890/in/pool-camerapedia/ http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3218/2846309890_81b59f0ea5_m_d.jpg] [http://www.flickr.com/photos/rebollo_fr/2461967150/in/pool-camerapedia/ http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3201/2461967150_af3f9b65ec_m_d.jpg]
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|| ''Left: column in {{FAR}} December 1949. Right: advertisement in the same issue. {{public domain Japan new}}''
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The Cooky 35 was advertised and featured in Japanese magazines from July 1949 to March 1950. The December 1949 advertisement in {{FAR}} mentions the Zephyr f/3.5 lens only, and gives no price.<REF> Advertisement in {{FAR}} December 1949, p.42, reproduced in this page and in {{Kokusan}}, p.135. The lens name is spelled ゼファー. </REF> The pictured camera accordingly has the Zephyr f/3.5, with lens no.1006x. The column in the same issue of the magazine shows a different example of the camera, perhaps having lens no.1000x.
  
Of the actual examples observed so far, three have the Runer f/2.8 lens (no.10090, 10153 and 10520), and only one has the Zephyr f/3.5 (no.10127), showing slight differences in the lens barrel. No body number is visible on the cameras. It is likely that the lens numbers started at 10001, and only a few examples were made, surely little more than 500.
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Of the actual examples observed so far, three have the Runer f/2.8 lens (no.10090, 10153 and 10520), and only one has the Zephyr f/3.5 (no.10127), showing slight differences in the lens barrel.<REF> No.10090 observed in an online auction; no.10127 pictured in Pritchard, p.50; no.10153 pictured in {{SUG}}, item 3223; no.10520 pictured in Lewis, p.66, and in [http://sts.kahaku.go.jp/sts/detail.php?&key=103310371105&APage=623 this page of the Center of the History of Japanese Industrial Technology]. </REF> It is likely that the lens numbers started at 10001, and only a few examples were made, surely little more than 500.
  
 
== Notes ==
 
== Notes ==
Line 22: Line 36:
 
* {{Lewis}} P.66.
 
* {{Lewis}} P.66.
 
* {{McKeown12}} P.456.
 
* {{McKeown12}} P.456.
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* {{FAR}}. Advertisement by [[Kashiwa|Kashiwa Seikō]] in December 1949 (p.42).
 +
* {{FAR}} December 1949. "Ōru kokusan kamera" (オール国産カメラ, All of Japanese cameras). P.39.
 
* {{Pritchard}} Pp.49–50.
 
* {{Pritchard}} Pp.49–50.
 
* {{Zukan}} Item 3223.
 
* {{Zukan}} Item 3223.

Revision as of 17:42, 10 September 2008

The Cooky 35 (クッキー35)[1] is a Japanese viewfinder camera for 35mm film, made by Kashiwa Seikō in 1949–50 and noted for its small size.

Description

The Cooky 35 takes fifty 24×26mm exposures on standard perforated 35mm film in regular cassettes.[2] The viewfinder is on the middle of the top plate, in a small casing extending to the right, as seen by the photographer.

The back comes off together with the bottom plate for film loading. The film cartridge is loaded into the right-hand compartment, and there is a large pressure plate hinged to the bottom of the main body. The advance knob is at the top left, covered by a patch of leatherette. A lever is visible on the rear, next to the viewfinder eyepiece, probably for manual unlock of the film advance after each exposure. The exposure counter is made of two discs: a smaller one graduated from 0 to 5, for tens, and a larger one from 0 to 9, for units. These are placed above the casing on the viewfinder's right, next to the shutter release.

There is a lever next to the advance knob, to the left of the viewfinder, with a letter R engraved nearby, most probably a rewind switch. The camera has no dedicated rewind knob, but there is not enough internal room for a take-up film cartridge, and it seems that the advance knob is used for rewind too. The details of how this is achieved are unclear, but a contemporary description mentions a new pattern for film advance and rewind.[3]

The leaf shutter, placed behind the lens, gives 100, 50, 25, B speeds, seemingly selected by a lever at the top. Another lever is visible on the left, surely to cock the shutter. The release linkage is also visible at the right of the barrel, to the bottom. The lens is fixed and front-cell focusing; it is either a Cooky Runer Anastigmat 40mm f/2.8 or a Cooky Zephyr Anastigmat 40mm f/3.5. On the cameras having the Runer, the aperture is adjustable to 22 by turning a ring around the barrel.

The name COOKY 35 is engraved above the viewfinder, together with the mention PATENT KASHIWASEIKO. No body number is visible on the cameras. The name COOKY 35 is repeated at the front of the brown leather case.[4]

Commercial life and known examples

The Cooky 35 was advertised and featured in Japanese magazines from July 1949 to March 1950. The December 1949 advertisement in Photo Art mentions the Zephyr f/3.5 lens only, and gives no price.[5] The pictured camera accordingly has the Zephyr f/3.5, with lens no.1006x. The column in the same issue of the magazine shows a different example of the camera, perhaps having lens no.1000x.

Of the actual examples observed so far, three have the Runer f/2.8 lens (no.10090, 10153 and 10520), and only one has the Zephyr f/3.5 (no.10127), showing slight differences in the lens barrel.[6] It is likely that the lens numbers started at 10001, and only a few examples were made, surely little more than 500.

Notes

  1. Sugiyama, item 3223, says in the Japanese text that the name was spelled クッケィ, but the advertisement reproduced in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p.135, has クッキー.
  2. Advertisement reproduced in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p.135.
  3. Column in Photo Art December 1949, p.39: フィルム捲返し装置は本機の新考案.
  4. Case observed in an online auction.
  5. Advertisement in Photo Art December 1949, p.42, reproduced in this page and in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p.135. The lens name is spelled ゼファー.
  6. No.10090 observed in an online auction; no.10127 pictured in Pritchard, p.50; no.10153 pictured in Sugiyama, item 3223; no.10520 pictured in Lewis, p.66, and in this page of the Center of the History of Japanese Industrial Technology.

Bibliography

  • Asahi Camera (アサヒカメラ) editorial staff. Shōwa 10–40nen kōkoku ni miru kokusan kamera no rekishi (昭和10–40年広告にみる国産カメラの歴史, Japanese camera history as seen in advertisements, 1935–1965). Tokyo: Asahi Shinbunsha, 1994. ISBN 4-02-330312-7. Item 491.
  • Lewis, Gordon, ed. The History of the Japanese Camera. Rochester, N.Y.: George Eastman House, International Museum of Photography & Film, 1991. ISBN 0-935398-17-1 (paper), 0-935398-16-3 (hard). P.66.
  • McKeown, James M. and Joan C. McKeown's Price Guide to Antique and Classic Cameras, 12th Edition, 2005-2006. USA, Centennial Photo Service, 2004. ISBN 0-931838-40-1 (hardcover). ISBN 0-931838-41-X (softcover). P.456.
  • Photo Art. Advertisement by Kashiwa Seikō in December 1949 (p.42).
  • Photo Art December 1949. "Ōru kokusan kamera" (オール国産カメラ, All of Japanese cameras). P.39.
  • Pritchard, Michael and St. Denny, Douglas. Spy Cameras — A century of detective and subminiature cameras. London: Classic Collection Publications, 1993. ISBN 1-874485-00-3. Pp.49–50.
  • Sugiyama, Kōichi (杉山浩一); Naoi, Hiroaki (直井浩明); Bullock, John R. The Collector's Guide to Japanese Cameras. 国産カメラ図鑑 (Kokusan kamera zukan). Tokyo: Asahi Sonorama, 1985. ISBN 4-257-03187-5. Item 3223.

Links