Fuji Kōgaku

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Fuji Kōgaku is a Japanese camera maker that was active before the war, and is unrelated to the other well known Fuji company. Its full name was Fuji Kōgaku Kikai Seisakusho (富士光学器械製作所) between 1936 and 1938, then Fuji Kōgaku Kōgyō K.K. (富士光学工業株式会社, Fuji Optical Industries Co Ltd) between 1939 and 1943. The company sometimes used the short name Fujikō (富士光). The distributor of the Fujikō cameras was Fuji Kōgaku Shōji K.K. (富士光学商事株式会社), at least in 1941 and 1942[1]. The company made a range of cameras called with the "Lyra" (ライラ) name. This name was certainly meant to recall "Leica" (ライカ in Japanese).

The company logo was FUJI KŌGAKU written in a cemented doublet lens scheme (a type of logo used by many other optical companies). There was a protuberance on top of the logo, maybe an allusion to the Mount Fuji.

Various Japanese websites[2] say that the company became Taisei Kōki after the war, but this page at Japan Family Camera is more precise, saying that the company was split in two parts: Taisei Kōki and Katsuma Kōgaku, with the latter one keeping the Lyra brand name. Indeed the logo used by both companies is similar to the one used by Fuji Kōgaku.

120 film

4.5×6 rangefinder, collapsible

4.5×6 folding

McKeown mentions a Bakyna strut-folding camera, with a bakelite body.

6×6 folding

6×6 TLR

127 film

3×4 folding

McKeown mentions a Baby Balnet 3×4 folder, copy of the Baby Ikonta.

4×6.5 folding

Notes

Printed bibliography

Links