Difference between revisions of "Easternflex"

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(little known, perhaps made by Toyo Seiki Kogaku)
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{{Japanese postwar TLR}}
 
{{Japanese postwar TLR}}
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The '''Easternflex''' is a Japanese 6×6 TLR of the mid-1950s, perhaps made by [[Tōyō Seiki Kōgaku]] (see below).
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== General description ==
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The Elbowflex is a regular copy of the [[Rolleicord]]. The whole front standard is moved back and forth for focusing. The film advance and focus knobs are on the photographer's right. There is a sportsfinder in the viewing hood. The name ''EASTERNFLEX'' is inscribed on a nameplate above the front plate, and no company name is visible.
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The release button is placed at the bottom of the front standard, on the photographer's right. There is an accessory shoe on the left plate. The synch post is probably buried at the bottom of the left plate.
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== Versions ==
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The camera was featured in the news column of the ''[[Sankei Camera]]'' issue dated June 1955.<REF> {{Kokusan}}, p.&nbsp;346. </REF> It was called '''Easternflex A''' (イースタンフレックスA) and attributed to "Tōyō Seiki" (東洋精機).<REF> {{Kokusan}}, p.&nbsp;346. </REF> It was announced with semi-automatic film advance, a [[TSK]] shutter (B, 1&ndash;200, self-timer), a PC synch post and Unicor<REF> Name inferred from the ''katakana'' ユニコール. </REF> 75/3.5 four-element lenses made by [[Union Kōgaku]].<REF> All details: {{Kokusan}}, p.&nbsp;346. </REF>
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The actual examples observed so far fall in two different versions. They all have a [[Ceres]] shutter (B, 1&ndash;300, self-timer).
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The '''first version''' has similarities with the [[Elbowflex]] and [[Princeflex|Prince Junior]]. It has J-Luminar lenses and a round exposure counter window at the top right.<REF> Example pictured in {{Sugiyama}}, item 2090. </REF> There is no soft release thread and no depth-of-field scale.
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The '''second version''' has Lumicor 8cm f/3.5 lenses. The strap lugs are very different and no exposure counter is visible. The advance and focus knobs are bigger, the distance scale is black and there is a depth-of-field scale. The accessory shoe is placed further to the bottom. Of this second versions, some examples have a soft release thread and others don't, and there are variations in the back latch.<REF> Compare the example pictured in {{McKeown}}, p.&nbsp;253, with the example pictured in [http://www.samlarkameror.com/2_spegelreflex.htm this page at Samlarkameror.com]. </REF>
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== Maker ==
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The attribution to "Tōyō Seiki", the similarities with the [[Elbowflex]] and [[Princeflex|Prince Junior]] and the use of a [[TSK]] shutter on one version seem to indicate that the camera was made by [[Tōyō Seiki Kōgaku]].
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== Notes ==
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<references />
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== Bibliography ==
 
== Bibliography ==
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* {{Showa10}} Item 381. (No advertisement for the Easternflex is reproduced.)
 
* {{McKeown12}} P.&nbsp;253.
 
* {{McKeown12}} P.&nbsp;253.
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* {{Zukan}} Item 2090.
  
 
== Links ==
 
== Links ==

Revision as of 16:05, 23 May 2007

Japanese 6×6 TLR
Postwar models
6×7cm Koni-Omegaflex M
6×6cm
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(edit)
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Prewar and wartime models ->
Other TLR, pseudo TLR and medium format SLR ->
Other Japanese 6×6, 4.5×6, 3×4 and 4×4 ->

The Easternflex is a Japanese 6×6 TLR of the mid-1950s, perhaps made by Tōyō Seiki Kōgaku (see below).

General description

The Elbowflex is a regular copy of the Rolleicord. The whole front standard is moved back and forth for focusing. The film advance and focus knobs are on the photographer's right. There is a sportsfinder in the viewing hood. The name EASTERNFLEX is inscribed on a nameplate above the front plate, and no company name is visible.

The release button is placed at the bottom of the front standard, on the photographer's right. There is an accessory shoe on the left plate. The synch post is probably buried at the bottom of the left plate.

Versions

The camera was featured in the news column of the Sankei Camera issue dated June 1955.[1] It was called Easternflex A (イースタンフレックスA) and attributed to "Tōyō Seiki" (東洋精機).[2] It was announced with semi-automatic film advance, a TSK shutter (B, 1–200, self-timer), a PC synch post and Unicor[3] 75/3.5 four-element lenses made by Union Kōgaku.[4]

The actual examples observed so far fall in two different versions. They all have a Ceres shutter (B, 1–300, self-timer).

The first version has similarities with the Elbowflex and Prince Junior. It has J-Luminar lenses and a round exposure counter window at the top right.[5] There is no soft release thread and no depth-of-field scale.

The second version has Lumicor 8cm f/3.5 lenses. The strap lugs are very different and no exposure counter is visible. The advance and focus knobs are bigger, the distance scale is black and there is a depth-of-field scale. The accessory shoe is placed further to the bottom. Of this second versions, some examples have a soft release thread and others don't, and there are variations in the back latch.[6]

Maker

The attribution to "Tōyō Seiki", the similarities with the Elbowflex and Prince Junior and the use of a TSK shutter on one version seem to indicate that the camera was made by Tōyō Seiki Kōgaku.

Notes

  1. Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 346.
  2. Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 346.
  3. Name inferred from the katakana ユニコール.
  4. All details: Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 346.
  5. Example pictured in Sugiyama, item 2090.
  6. Compare the example pictured in McKeown, p. 253, with the example pictured in this page at Samlarkameror.com.

Bibliography

Links

In Swedish: