Dianette and Pionette

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The Dianette (ダイアネット) and Pionette (ピオネット) are Japanese 4×6.5 strut-folders made by Fuji Kōgaku in 1936. It is said that these two names refer to the same camera, sold as Pionette in Kantō (Eastern Japan) and Dianette in Kansai (Western Japan).[1]

General description

The Dianette and Pionette are copies of the Pearlette by Konishiroku, itself copied from the German Piccolette by Contessa-Nettel. All these cameras are inspired by the Vest Pocket Kodak.

The front standard is mounted on a pair of scissor struts. There is a brilliant finder at the top right of the front plate. The winding knob is situated at the top right, as seen by the photographer holding the camera vertically. The back is hinged to the bottom. The Dianette and Pionette are dual format and can take 3×4 exposures.[2]

The front standard is marked Dianette or Pionette at the bottom and there is a logo at the top left.

Advertising

The camera was featured in the new products column of the June 1936 issue of Asahi Camera, according to Kokusan kamera no rekishi.[3] An advertisement dated March 1936 mentioned lenses from f/6.3 to f/3.5, but the only price given was ¥28 for the f/6.3 focusing version.[4]

Kokusan kamera no rekishi reports that the shutter is a Picco giving T, B, 25, 50, 100 speeds (like on the Baby Lyra) and mentions the following choice of lenses:

  • Terionar f/4.5;
  • Anastigmat Pionar f/6.3;
  • meniscus f/8.[5]

Actual examples

Two body versions are known. One is a plain copy of the Pearlette and Piccolette and the other has a simpler design.

Plain Pearlette copy

This body version has a round cut-off on each side and a front plate extending to the bottom, acting as a standing leg. It is the version pictured in the March 1936 advertisement cited above, with a folding frame finder attached to the side plate and offset to the top and the mountain-shaped FUJI KOGAKU logo.

Three examples of this body version are pictured in Sugiyama with the name "Pionette". One has the same finder and logo as in the advertising picture. The lens is front-cell focusing and is reported to be a Terionar f/4.5 while the shutter is reported to be a Picco.[6] Another has a front-cell focusing lens, a partly erased logo and no frame finder. It is reported to have a Terionar f/6.3 lens on a Picco shutter.[7] The third one has a fixed-focus lens marked Fuji-Optical Achromat F=75mm, reported to have f/11 maximum aperure (perhaps by mistake)[8], and a dial-set shutter reportedly called Super and erroneously said to give B, 25–500 speeds. It has a wireframe finder attached to the front plate with an eyepiece attached to the back, and it also has an intricate round logo perhaps written TK.[9]

One example is also pictured in this page at Konrin's Garage.

Simpler body design

The other body version has a rectangular front plate, a retractable standing leg and straight body sides. Three examples are known, all of them called Dianette and sporting the FUJI KOGAKU logo. One is pictured in Sugiyama with a fixed-focus lens marked Fuji-Optical Achromat F=75mm (probably the meniscus f/8 mentioned in Kokusan kamera no rekishi) and a wireframe finder of which one part is missing.[10] The second one is pictured in McKeown with a focusing lens having a wider aperture, perhaps f/4.5, and a folding frame finder attached to the side plate.[11] The third one is pictured in this page of Nekosan's website.

Notes

  1. Kokusan kamera no rekishi p. 337.
  2. Dual format capability mentioned in an advertisement dated March 1936 reproduced in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 77.
  3. Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 337.
  4. Advertisement published in Asahi Camera, reproduced in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 77.
  5. Kokusan kamera no rekishi p. 337.
  6. Sugiyama item 1222.
  7. Sugiyama item 1223.
  8. This lens is not discernable from the f/8 lens equipping Sugiyama item 1037.
  9. Sugiyama item 1224.
  10. Sugiyama, item 1037.
  11. McKeown, p. 328.

Bibliography

Links

In Japanese:


Fuji Kōgaku cameras (edit)
prewar and wartime models postwar models
3×4 4×6.5 subminiature 4×4 subminiature
Baby Lyra | Baby Lyra Flex | Baby Balnet Dianette | Pionette Lyravit Balnet Four Comex
4.5×6 6×6 6×9 4.5×6 6×6
Bakyna | Semi Lyra | Lyrax Lyra Six | Lyra Flex Lyra (6×9) Semi Lyra | Pioneer Lyra Six | Lyraflex