Nifca-Dox

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The Nifca-Dox (ニフカドックス) is a Japanese strut folding camera taking 6.5×9cm film plates or pack film. It was made by Nichidoku Shashinki Shōten (predecessor of Minolta) in 1930–1.

Name

"Nifca" comes from Nichidoku Foto Camera.[1] Nichi in Nichidoku means Japan, and it is certainly not coincidental that "Nifca" can also be read as Nippon Foto Camera.

It is said that "Dox" refers to the giant flying boat Dornier Do X (see for example this Wikipedia page) which first flew in 1929 and made a transatlantic flight, leaving Friedrichshafen in November 1930 and reaching New York in August 1931.[2]

Release date

Most sources say that the Nifca-Dox was released in 1930.[3] However documents compiled by the company Chiyoda Kōgaku Seikō (i.e. Minolta) and published in Shashin Kōgyō September 1958 say 1931 instead.[4]

The only original document observed so far is an advertisement in Asahi Camera February 1931.[5] The Nifca-Dox does not appear in the advertisement published the previous month in the same magazine, which shows the Nifca range with the Nifcarette, Nifcaklapp and Nifcasport.[6] On that basis, no definitive conclusion can be drawn on the release date.

Description of the body

The Nifca-Dox has a metal body. There is no folding bed but a rectangular front plate supported by straight spring-loaded struts at the four corners. This configuration is similar to that of the Goerz Pocket Tenax. (Nichidoku also copied the Roll-Tenax, another Goerz product, for the focusing device of the Nifcarette A.) Unlike the Tenax, the bellows is of the classical type, with multiple creases.

There is a Newton finder on the photographer's left; the front element swings down along the front plate to gain size, and the rear bead is retractable too. A handle is attached to the right end of the body.

The name NIFCA–DOX is inscribed of the front plate at the bottom right, as seen from the front. The serial number is at the bottom left, and the logo of Nichidoku is at the top left; the logo has the letters N, D, PH and Co assembled inside a circle, surely for Nichi Doku Photo Company. The ground glass back has the same round logo embossed in the leather hood.[7]

Lens and shutter

The shutter is ostensibly a Koilos, but at least one source says for some reason that it was "clearly made by the company (Nichidoku) itself".[8] It is mounted in a black octagonal casing protruding from the front plate. It is everset and gives 25, 50, 100, B, T speeds, set by a wheel at the top. This wheel is covered by a metal plate inscribed KOILOS and Nifca Photo, the same as on the isolated example of the Nifcarette B found with a Koilos shutter. The release lever is attached to the front of the shutter casing, and there is a connector for a cable release protruding from the octagon's left edge (as seen from the front).

The lens is a front-cell focusing Nifca Anastigmat 105mm f/6.8, engraved Nifca–Anastigmat 1:6.8 f=105mm Nr xxxx with no mention of a lens maker. This might be an imported German lens that was rebranded, or a genuine Japanese lens.[9] The aperture is set by a wheel protruding from the bottom right edge of the octagon (as seen from the front), certainly containing Waterhouse stops; the selected f-number is read in a small window on the right of the lens.

It is said that the Nifca-Dox was the first Japanese model to have a front-cell focusing lens.[10] If the lens is Japanese, it would also be the first Japanese camera sold with a Japanese lens, released shortly before the Tropical Lily with Hexar lens.

Some sources mention a 105mm f/6.3 lens too, but its existence is unconfirmed.[11]

Commercial life

The Nifca-Dox appears in an advertisement in Asahi Camera February 1931.[12] The price is given as ¥29, with an f/6.8 Anastigmat lens, a Koilos shutter and three plate holders. The advertisement does not mention the Do X flying boat. Two pictures are provided, both heavily retouched; none shows a serial number. One of these pictures was re-used by the company in an early historical article.[13]

It is said that 2–3,000 examples of the Nifca-Dox were made.[14] In his autobiography, Tashima Kazuo mentioned that the camera "sold like hot cakes" (free translation of 飛ぶように売れ).[15]

Actual examples

Very few surviving examples of the Nifca-Dox have been observed so far, perhaps four or five. One has body no.6650, engraved as No 6650.[16] It was belonging to the Minolta Gallery in the 1980s;[17] it was not displayed in the JCII exhibition about Konica and Minolta in 2005, and its current fate is unknown. The second and third examples have no.6671 and no.6798; their serial number is prefixed by Nr instead of No.[18] Pictures are known of perhaps two more examples, but their serial number is not legible.[19] All these cameras look exactly identical, except for the serial number prefix.

Notes

  1. Taniguchi, p.276 of Shashin Kōgyō no.77 (article also reproduced in Tanimura, p.8 of Camera Collectors' News no.116), Francesch, p.17, Nifcarette page of the Konica Minolta website.
  2. Taniguchi, p.275 of Shashin Kōgyō no.77 (article also reproduced in Tanimura, pp.7–8 of Camera Collectors' News no.116). This is repeated in Francesch, p.19, Baird, p.40, Lewis, p.45, Scheibel, p.11, Sugiyama, item 1182, Tanimura in Camera Collectors' News no.116.
  3. Francesch, pp.18, 67 and 263, Awano, p.14 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.12, Saeki, p.77 of the same magazine, Baird, p.40, Scheibel, p.11, McKeown, p.672, Sugiyama, item 1182.
  4. Taniguchi, p.275 of Shashin Kōgyō no.77, and "Hensen kamera ichiran-pyō", p.295 of the same magazine (documents also reproduced in Tanimura, pp.7–8 of Camera Collectors' News no.116).
  5. Advertisement reproduced in Hagiya, p.9 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.12.
  6. Advertisement reproduced in Awano, p.6 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.12.
  7. Picture of the ground glass back visible in this page of the Nagoya Club website.
  8. Awano, p.14 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.12: シャッターもコイロス名ではあるが、明らかに自社製と思われるものを取り付け.
  9. Awano, p.14 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.12, says that this is a Japanese lens.
  10. Awano, p.14 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.12.
  11. McKeown, p.672, says that two models were made, with f/6.8 or f/6.3 lens. This page of the Nagoya Camera Club says that the lens is a Nifca-Anastigmat 105mm f/6.3, but this might be a typo.
  12. Advertisement reproduced in Hagiya, p.9 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.12.
  13. Picture reproduced in Taniguchi, p.275 of Shashin Kōgyō no.77 (article also reproduced in Tanimura, p.8 of Camera Collectors' News no.116).
  14. According to Tashima Gizō (son of Tashima Kazuo, founder of the company), interviewed by Saeki Kakugorō on p.77 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.12.
  15. Tashima Kazuo, Watakushi no rirekisho, reproduced in Andō, p.2 of Camera Collectors' News no.127.
  16. Example pictured in Francesch, p.70, and in Sugiyama, item 1182.
  17. Sugiyama, item 1182.
  18. No.6671 pictured in Baird, p.40, Lewis, p.45, McKeown, p.672, Scheibel, p.10, this page of the Manual Minolta website and this Chinese webpage. No.6798 pictured in Awano, p.14 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.12.
  19. Example pictured in this page of the Nagoya Camera Club, and example pictured in Minolta Eimukku 735, pp.131–2.

Bibliography

Links

In English:

In French:

In Japanese:

In Chinese:


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