Difference between revisions of "Nishida lenses"

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(For 6×6cm format: 75/4.5 and 75/3.5: +1)
(For 6×6cm format: 75/4.5 and 75/3.5: +3)
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* [[Proud postwar folders|Semi Proud (postwar)]] (Wester 75/3.5)
 
* [[Proud postwar folders|Semi Proud (postwar)]] (Wester 75/3.5)
 
* [[Apollo and Mikado]] (Wester 75/3.5)
 
* [[Apollo and Mikado]] (Wester 75/3.5)
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* [[Wester (wartime 4.5×6)]]
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* [[Semi Wester (postwar)]]
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* [[Wester 6×6 folders]]
  
 
== For 4×4cm format: 70/4.5 and 65/3.2 ==
 
== For 4×4cm format: 70/4.5 and 65/3.2 ==

Revision as of 23:19, 11 January 2008

Nishida made a number of lenses from the 1930s to the 1950s, sold to other camera makers or used on its own cameras.

For 6×6cm format: 75/4.5 and 75/3.5

From the late 1930s, Nishida offered a standard three-element 75mm lens for 6×6cm or 4.5×6cm format cameras, in f/4.5 and f/3.5 aperture. It was called Wester Anastigmat on most cameras, but was also supplied as the Lucky Anastigmat to go with the Fujimoto products.[1]

The following list of cameras is probably incomplete, and the inclusion of a model does not mean that all the versions were equipped with Nishida lenses:

For 4×4cm format: 70/4.5 and 65/3.2

In the late 1930s and early 1940s, Nishida made the Super Anastigmat 70/4.5 and 65/3.2 lenses mounted on the Super Flex Baby 4×4cm SLR made by Umemoto and distributed by Kikōdō.

Notes

  1. Lucky lenses made by Nishida: Tanimura, p.51 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.11, from an interview of Takahashi Kenzō.

Bibliography