Difference between revisions of "Mansfield Skylark"

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(adding wiki link to new Manufacturer page, and moving company info. We may want to add pages for Mansfield prods other than Skylark cameras. Re-linked, attributed top photo)
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| image_text=Mansfield Skylark in leather case
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|image_text= Mansfield Skylark (by [[Yamato]])
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|image_by= DG Houlihan
Photo credit: [http://www.flickr.com/photos/dg_houlihan/ : Diana Houlihan], Some Rights Reserved [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/]
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'''Skylark''' was the name for no less than four [[Clones, Rebadges and Rebrands|rebadged]] cameras distributed by Mansfield Industries of Chicago, Illinois:
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'''Skylark''' was the name for no less than four [[Clones, Rebadges and Rebrands|rebadged]] cameras distributed by [[Mansfield|Mansfield Industries]] of Chicago, Illinois.
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==Cameras==
 
*the 1957 '''Skylark''', rebadged from the Argon<ref>Sugiyama/Naoi “Collector’s Guide to Japanese Cameras” code #3099, p.140.</ref> rangefinder camera which was the export version of the Windsor 35 by Toko Photographic Works. This rangefinder camera featured a 45mm / f1.9 lens, shutter speeds B, 1s to 1/500s.
 
*the 1957 '''Skylark''', rebadged from the Argon<ref>Sugiyama/Naoi “Collector’s Guide to Japanese Cameras” code #3099, p.140.</ref> rangefinder camera which was the export version of the Windsor 35 by Toko Photographic Works. This rangefinder camera featured a 45mm / f1.9 lens, shutter speeds B, 1s to 1/500s.
 
*the 1957 '''Skylark E''' was a [[Royal 35M]] by [[Royal Camera|Royal Camera Company]], rebadged for Mansfield. Like the 35M, this rangefinder camera had a Tominar 45mm / f1.9-f16 lens, shutter speeds B, 1s to 1/500s with an uncoupled selenium meter,
 
*the 1957 '''Skylark E''' was a [[Royal 35M]] by [[Royal Camera|Royal Camera Company]], rebadged for Mansfield. Like the 35M, this rangefinder camera had a Tominar 45mm / f1.9-f16 lens, shutter speeds B, 1s to 1/500s with an uncoupled selenium meter,
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| image_text=Mansfield Skylark V
 
| image_text=Mansfield Skylark V
 
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== User notes ==
 
== User notes ==
 
The best little camera that no one's heard of! It is pretty easy to use, but I haven't been able to develop a complete roll yet as the winding mechanism tends to tear the film! ''(writes Camerapedia editor Dhoulihan)''
 
The best little camera that no one's heard of! It is pretty easy to use, but I haven't been able to develop a complete roll yet as the winding mechanism tends to tear the film! ''(writes Camerapedia editor Dhoulihan)''
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A great 100% manual rangefinder. This Skylark V was in very unusable condition when it came my way. Now a very nice & worthwhile addition. Nice photographs come from this camera. ''(writes Camerapedia editor Valdormar)''
 
A great 100% manual rangefinder. This Skylark V was in very unusable condition when it came my way. Now a very nice & worthwhile addition. Nice photographs come from this camera. ''(writes Camerapedia editor Valdormar)''
 
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== Mansfield Industries ==
 
This may be the place to describe Mansfield Industries<ref>The company name was not Mansfield Holiday, as mistakenly notated in McKeown‘s.</ref>. It was a Chicago-based company that distributed movie cameras, projectors, accessories and imported cameras which were rebadged with its logo or name from the late 1950’s into the mid-1960’s. Its various product lines had names like ‘Fairfield’, ‘Holiday’, ’Skylark’, ’Starlite’ and ‘Ultra’.
 
 
In 1962 Mansfield Industries bought [[Argus]] from General Telephone and Electronics (which had acquired Sylvania, with its 1957 Argus holdings, in 1961). Mansfield appropriated the better-known Argus name and named itself as a division of Argus. It moved the Argus/Mansfield headquarters to Chicago, Illinois, although some manufacturing facilities stayed in Ann Arbor, Michigan<ref>Which still exist and house the Argus Camera Museum, George and Gene O’Neal founders, through C3 Partners William Martin and Joe O’Neal. 535 W. Williams St, Ann Arbor, MI 48103</ref>. In 1965 Sylvania reacquired Argus. Without its main product base, Mansfield Industries disappeared from the market<ref>Henry J Gambino, PhD, “The Argus Museum—Ann Arbor’s Hidden Treasure”</ref>.
 
 
Side note: a later 35mm rangefinder camera distributed by Mansfield was the 1962 Eye-Tronic, rebadged from the Mamiya EE Super Merit<ref>Sugiyama/Naoi “Collectors Guide to Japanese Cameras“ code #3393, p.181.</ref>, with Mantinar 40mm / f2.8-f16, shutter speeds 1/30s to 1/250s.
 
  
 
== Additional Pictures ==
 
== Additional Pictures ==
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| image_text=Mansfield Skylark, showing film guide and internal workings
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| image_text=Mansfield Skylark ([[Yamato]]), showing film guide and internal workings
 
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Photo credit: [http://www.flickr.com/photos/dg_houlihan/ : Diana Houlihan], Some Rights Reserved [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/]
 
Photo credit: [http://www.flickr.com/photos/dg_houlihan/ : Diana Houlihan], Some Rights Reserved [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/]

Revision as of 20:19, 5 March 2011


Skylark was the name for no less than four rebadged cameras distributed by Mansfield Industries of Chicago, Illinois.


Cameras

  • the 1957 Skylark, rebadged from the Argon[1] rangefinder camera which was the export version of the Windsor 35 by Toko Photographic Works. This rangefinder camera featured a 45mm / f1.9 lens, shutter speeds B, 1s to 1/500s.
  • the 1957 Skylark E was a Royal 35M by Royal Camera Company, rebadged for Mansfield. Like the 35M, this rangefinder camera had a Tominar 45mm / f1.9-f16 lens, shutter speeds B, 1s to 1/500s with an uncoupled selenium meter,
  • the 1957 Skylark V, from the Royal 35P, was a meterless rangefinder camera with a Cimenar 45mm / f1.9-f16 lens, shutter speeds B, 1s to 1/300s.
  • the 1961 Mansfield Skylark was a slightly modified Palmat Automatic by Yamato Optical Company. This last Skylark was an fixed-focus automatic-exposure viewfinder camera with coupled selenium meter, Mantar or Luminor 40mm / f4 lens, shutter speeds B, 1/10s to 1/200s. It does not take a battery, its selenium meter was driven by light alone. Exposure compensation was set by a lever on the numbered scale on the lens, based on an ASA/DIN film guide inset on the camera’s lift-off back. This was the only Skylark that was actually engraved with “Mansfield” as well as the “MI” crest logo seen on the earlier versions.

User notes

The best little camera that no one's heard of! It is pretty easy to use, but I haven't been able to develop a complete roll yet as the winding mechanism tends to tear the film! (writes Camerapedia editor Dhoulihan)

A great 100% manual rangefinder. This Skylark V was in very unusable condition when it came my way. Now a very nice & worthwhile addition. Nice photographs come from this camera. (writes Camerapedia editor Valdormar)

Additional Pictures

Photo credit: : Diana Houlihan, Some Rights Reserved [1]

Photo credit: : Diana Houlihan, Some Rights Reserved [2]

Photo credit: : Diana Houlihan, Some Rights Reserved [3]

Photo credit: : Diana Houlihan, Some Rights Reserved [4]

Notes and References

  1. Sugiyama/Naoi “Collector’s Guide to Japanese Cameras” code #3099, p.140.

Links

Sample Image Galleries

PBase sample photos[5]