Kodak Retina IIa

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The Kodak Retina IIa was a rangefinder-focusing, folding 35mm camera made by Kodak AG, the German subsidiary of Kodak.

Confusingly, the designation Retina IIa can refer to two different camera production runs, separated by a gap of 10 years. Due to this (and other confusing Retina nomenclature), collectors and Retina specialists often refer to Retina models by the factory type number instead.

The pre-WWII Retina IIa (Typ 150) was a small redesign of the top plate and frame counter of the preceding Retina II. It was built from 1939 to 1941.

The war-time German government ordered at stop to all camera production at Kodak A.G. in the summer of 1941.

From the fall of 1946, the Typ 011 Retina II was in production until August of 1949.

From August 1949 to December 1950, the Typ 014 Retina II was manufactured.

The second camera series designated Retina IIa was the Typ 016 Retina IIa.




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This postwar IIa improved upon prior Retina II versions with the addition of a rapid-wind lever, which was coupled to also cock the shutter. Fitting this feature into the already-established folding body style required a complex linkage, whose gearing proved vulnerable to damage in this and subsequent folding Retinas.

Classic-camera aficionados such as Stephen Gandy have commented that the IIa may represent the "sweet spot" of the entire Retina series [1]: The IIa had been modernized to include rangefinder focus, excellent-quality f/2.0 lenses from Schneider and Rodenstock, and rapid advance, in a compact package scarcely larger than the original 1934 Retina.

However the IIa had not yet succumbed to the feature creep of built-in metering and interchangeable front lens elements, which necessitated the larger, plumper body style of the post-1954 Retina models.

On the negative side, the viewfinder of the IIa is not especially large or bright; and the shutter speed sequence was not yet the standard geometric series adopted by camera makers in the late 1950s. However the coated 50mm f/2.0 Retina-Xenon lens remains a credible performer even by modern standards.


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