Lupo
Revision as of 15:24, 11 March 2024 by Dustin McAmera (talk | contribs) (New short page with a couple of refs.)
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La Fotomeccanica C. Lupo was a maker of large-format studio cameras in Turin, at least between the 1930s and 1960s. Danilo Cecchi states that the firm began operating in 1932,[1] and gives the names of three cameras:
- Victoria (1935) - 13x18cm and 18x24cm (referred to by Cecchi as a 'fotocamera da terrazza', a phrase not found elsewhere: system translation offers only 'terrace camera' or 'patio camera')
- Aldina (1960) - 13x18cm technical camera;[2] Cast front and rear standards in hammered-finish paint or enamel, mounted on two chrome-plated rails; tapered bellows, and short enough to be portable. Appears to offer front rise and shift, front and rear tilt and swing. Circular metal lens-board.
- Studio 7 (1962) - 13x18cm (referred to by Cecchi as the Studio 7 models, in the plural)[1]
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 'L'Industria Fotografica Italiana' Part 4, Danilo Cecchi, hosted at Nadir; three-line paragraph about Lupo is close to the bottom of the page.
- ↑ Aldina fitted with 21cm f/4.5 Voigtländer Apo-Lanthar from a Technika, in a dial-set Compund shutter; offered for sale in an online auction by Oldcam in June 2023.
Links
- This post, LF camera made in Italy - request for information at Photrio, March 2024, includes a couple of photos of a 13x18cm camera; parallel bellows, aluminium standards racking on two long chrome-plated rails, circular lens-board, and all mounted on a studio stand; from its appearance, one of the 1960s cameras.
- A search for 'Lupo Aldina' at Flickr gives a handful of portraits taken with an Aldina II by user Evthing45.