Difference between revisions of "Ensign Midget"

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|image_text= Ensign Midget (the simplified model 22)
 
|image_text= Ensign Midget (the simplified model 22)

Revision as of 05:45, 29 August 2018

The Ensign Midget was a tiny[1] roll film strut folder made by Houghton-Butcher in the UK.

It was introduced in 1934, to a design by Swedish engineer Magnus Niéll - designer of the Ensignette. Production was halted by war work in 1941. Film size was Ensign E10.

The original models - with a roughly diamond-shaped nameplate surrounding the lens - had a 3-speed shutter and either a fixed-focus ("All Distance") lens with two apertures (A/D model), or a focusing Ensar-Anastigmat lens with 5 stops (A/N model). In 1935, the cheaper "model 22" was introduced, with a single-speed (+T) shutter, simpler viewfinder and other simplifications. The earlier models were renamed "33" and "55" at this time.

There was a special edition of silver-painted Midgets for the 1935 Silver Jubilee of King George V and Queen Mary.



Notes

  1. This image of someone holding an Ensign Midget, posted to Flickr by Neil Curry, illustrates how small the camera is.

Links