Difference between revisions of "Misuzu Shōkai"
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The website of the company said that the Midget was made by Misuzu itself. | The website of the company said that the Midget was made by Misuzu itself. | ||
− | == Other cameras | + | == Other cameras sold by Misuzu Shōkai == |
+ | === As a distributor === | ||
+ | * [[Well Standard]] and [[Well Super]] by [[Nihon Kōki]] | ||
* [[Semi Leotax]] by [[Shōwa|Shōwa Kōgaku]] (prewar and wartime period) | * [[Semi Leotax]] by [[Shōwa|Shōwa Kōgaku]] (prewar and wartime period) | ||
− | * [[ | + | * [[Baby Leotax]] by [[Shōwa|Shōwa Kōgaku]] |
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
* [[Alpenflex]] by [[Hachiyō|Hachiyō Kōgaku Kōgyō]] | * [[Alpenflex]] by [[Hachiyō|Hachiyō Kōgaku Kōgyō]] | ||
− | * [[Shinkoh Rabbit]] by [[Tougodo|Tougodo (Yamanashi)]] | + | |
+ | === As an authorized dealer === | ||
+ | * [[Vester Klapp]] by [[Ginrei]] (as an authorized dealer) | ||
+ | * [[Speed Pocket]] by [[Kuribayashi]] (as an authorized dealer) | ||
+ | * [[Olympus Standard]] and [[Semi Olympus II]] by [[Olympus|Takachiho]] (as an authorized dealer) | ||
+ | * [[Tsubasa Chrome]], [[Tsubasa Spring]] and [[Tsubasa Super Semi]] by [[Kigawa]] (as an authorized dealer) | ||
+ | * [[Romax (6×6)]] (as an authorized dealer) | ||
+ | * [[Baron folders|Baron Six]] by [[Baron|Chūō Seiki]] (as an authorized dealer) | ||
+ | * [[Shinkoh Rabbit]] by [[Tougodo|Tougodo (Yamanashi)]] (as an authorized dealer) | ||
== Notes == | == Notes == |
Revision as of 12:26, 23 January 2008
Misuzu Shōkai and MSZ logo (1932). (Image rights) |
Misuzu Shōkai (i.e. Misuzu Trading Company) was a Japanese distributor. It was founded on June 1st, 1922 as simply Misuzu Shōkai (美篶商会) and became K.K. Misuzu Shōkai (㈱美篶商会) on May 16th, 1936.[1] It was based in Tokyo, Ginza[2] and distributed cameras from 1936 to 1944, then again from 1947 to the early 1950s. It sold a number of cameras under its own brands, and it perhaps made some cameras as well: it is said that the Midget subminiature was manufactured by the company.[3]
On June 24th, 1965, it changed its name again to Misuzu Shōkai K.K. (美スズ商会㈱, abandoning the kanji character, whose reading is hard to guess).[4] The company was still in existence in 2004.
Contents
Cameras sold by Misuzu Shōkai under its own name
- Vest Alex (4×6.5, 1936–8), later sold by Riken as the Vest Olympic
- Midget (1937)
- Romax plate folder (6.5×9, 1938)
- New Midget (1939, again in 1947)
- New Midget II f/4.5 (1940)
- Andes Four (4×4, 1941)
- Semi Lead (4.5×6 folder, 1941–4)
The website of the company said that the Midget was made by Misuzu itself.
Other cameras sold by Misuzu Shōkai
As a distributor
- Well Standard and Well Super by Nihon Kōki
- Semi Leotax by Shōwa Kōgaku (prewar and wartime period)
- Baby Leotax by Shōwa Kōgaku
- Alpenflex by Hachiyō Kōgaku Kōgyō
As an authorized dealer
- Vester Klapp by Ginrei (as an authorized dealer)
- Speed Pocket by Kuribayashi (as an authorized dealer)
- Olympus Standard and Semi Olympus II by Takachiho (as an authorized dealer)
- Tsubasa Chrome, Tsubasa Spring and Tsubasa Super Semi by Kigawa (as an authorized dealer)
- Romax (6×6) (as an authorized dealer)
- Baron Six by Chūō Seiki (as an authorized dealer)
- Shinkoh Rabbit by Tougodo (Yamanashi) (as an authorized dealer)
Notes
- ↑ Chronology of the Misuzu official website (web archive version Sep 24, 2004).
- ↑ Its address from 1939 to 1944 was Tōkyō-shi Kyōbashi-ku Ginza 8-chōme (東京市京橋区銀座八丁目). Source: advertisements reproduced in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, pp.96 and 102.
- ↑ Midget page of the Misuzu official website (web archive version Sep 24, 2004).
- ↑ Chronology of the Misuzu official website (web archive version Sep 24, 2004).
Bibliography
- Asahi Camera (アサヒカメラ) editorial staff. Shōwa 10–40nen kōkoku ni miru kokusan kamera no rekishi (昭和10–40年広告にみる国産カメラの歴史, Japanese camera history as seen in advertisements, 1935–1965). Tokyo: Asahi Shinbunsha, 1994. ISBN 4-02-330312-7.
Links
In Japanese:
- A web archive version (Sep 24, 2004) of the Misuzu Shōkai corporate site, which is now dead. There is a company presentation, with a chronology and the history of Misuzu's name, and a page presenting a Midget camera. (If the text is garbled rather than Japanese, switch the encoding to Shift-JIS.)