Difference between revisions of "Ihagee"

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* [http://www.pacificrimcamera.com/pp/ihagee/ihagee.htm Ihagee at Pacific Rim]
 
* [http://www.pacificrimcamera.com/pp/ihagee/ihagee.htm Ihagee at Pacific Rim]
 
* There is a short history of Ihagee at [http://www.dresdner-kameras.de/ dresdner-kameras.de]; see under "Firmen"
 
* There is a short history of Ihagee at [http://www.dresdner-kameras.de/ dresdner-kameras.de]; see under "Firmen"
* [http://www.peterlanczak.de/ihagee_history.htm a trilingual Ihagee company history]
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* a trilingual [http://www.peterlanczak.de/ihagee_history.htm Ihagee company history]
* [http://www.steenbergen-stichting.nl/ a Johan Steenbergen biography and Ihagee company history in Dutch]
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* a [http://www.steenbergen-stichting.nl/ Johan Steenbergen biography and Ihagee company] history in Dutch
  
  

Revision as of 17:25, 20 June 2006

Ihagee was a German camera maker, mostly known for its SLRs.

The company was founded in 1912 by Johan Steenbergen, a Dutch merchant. He had received his training at Ernemann in Dresden. The company started by producing conventional folding rollfilm and plate cameras. By 1918, the German economy was in serious trouble and so was Ihagee. It was liquidated and set up again. By 1925, Ihagee produced 1,000 rollfilm cameras a day.

In 1933 the Exakta A was presented. It was a single lens reflex and was greeted with scepticism. This Exakta took 3×6,5cm pictures on 127 film. The Exakta line was to become Ihagee's major success. In 1936 its most famous camera, the Kine Exakta was presented at the Leipziger Messe. This was arguably the first SLR to take pictures on 35mm film. From the beginning it had been a system camera, offering interchangable lenses, finders, microscope adapters and plate film backs.

By 1940 camera production ceased because of the war and Steenbergen, a Dutch national, had transferred ownership rights in the company to trusted partners and employees because of xenophobia in Germany.

In 1945, the Ihagee production facilities found themselves in the Soviet occupation zone. However, the Dresden plant started producing cameras again in 1945. For a time Ihagee had a special place in East Germany; while German companies were being nationalised into VEB (company owned by the people)Zeiss Ikon/Pentacon, Ihagee had a certain autonomy because it had been Dutch-owned and East German officials were reluctant to damage international relations. After the war Exakta continued to make Kine Exakta cameras. According to McKeown, postwar models have a ribbed mirror chamber.

35mm SLR cameras

See Exakta and Exa.

Links