Meyer

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Camera industry in Görlitz
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Curt Bentzin | Herbst & Firl | Meyer
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Neue Görlitzer Camera-Werke


Meyer was a German optical company, founded by Hugo Meyer (born 21.05.1863, died 01.03.1905) in Görlitz.

In 1918 Dr. Paul Rudolph, the inventor of Zeiss' Tessar and Protar, developed Meyer's Double Plasmat which was derived from Meyer's symmetrical Euryplan lens. In the 1920s he developed fast variants, the Kino-Plasmat f/2 and the World's fastest lens of its time, the Kino-Plasmat f/1.5 .

After WWII Meyer was the second East German lens supplier after Carl Zeiss Jena. It became a part of VEB Pentacon and after some point, all the Meyer lenses were renamed Pentacon.

In mid 1960s Meyer introduced lenses with interchangeable adapters for different camera types. The first such a lens was Orestegor 4/200, which could be mounted on Exakta Varex, Exa II, Pentacon, Praktina and Praktica 35 mm cameras with applicable adapters. Orestegor 5.6/500 could be mounted on Exakta Varex, Exa II, Pentacon, Praktina, Praktica as well as Praktisix medium format SLR.


Some trademarks used for Meyer lenses

For lens serial numbers see THIS page.

  • Aristoplan
  • Aristogmat
  • Aristostigmat
  • Diaplan (projection lens)
  • Double Plasmat
  • Domiplan
  • Doppelanastigmat
  • Doppelplasmat / Double-Plasmat
  • Epidon
  • Euryplan
  • Euryplan-Satz
  • Helioplan
  • Kinon Superior (projection lens)
  • Kino-Plasmat and Kinoplasmat
  • Lydith
  • Makroplasmat
  • Megon
  • Omin (projection lens)
  • Orestegon
  • Orestegor
  • Oreston
  • Orestor
  • Plasmat
  • Plasmat-Satz
  • Porträt Trioplan
  • Primagon
  • Primoplan
  • Primotar
  • Repro-Plasmat
  • Satz Plasmat and Satzplasmat
  • Telefogar
  • Tele-Megor and Telemegor
  • Trioplan
  • Triotar
  • Veraplan

The production of the lenses marked Domiplan, Oreston, Orestegon, Orestor, Orestegor, Lydith was continued when Meyer was incorporated into Pentacon. The lenses except the Domiplan lost their trademark names when they became Pentacon lenses.


Cameras

See also

The links go directly to the Meyer section:


Cameras with a fixed Meyer lens

Sources

  • Fincke H.E.: Das Objektiv deiner Kamera; Fotokinoverlag Halle, Halle, 1959.
  • Naumann H.: Das Auge meiner Kamera; Verlag von Wilhelm Knapp, Halle (Saale), 1951.
  • Puskov V.V.: Poradnik fotograficzny; PWT, Warsaw, 1956.

Links