Difference between revisions of "Oriental"

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'''Oriental Shashin Kōgyō K.K.''' (オリエンタル写真工業株式会社, translated by Oriental Photo Industrial Corporation) was a Japanese film maker founded in 1919. It used the Orient, Peacock and OK trademarks.<REF> Lewis, p.&nbsp;30. </REF> It used an OPIC logo (presumably for <U>O</U>riental <U>P</U>hoto <U>I</U>ndustrial <U>C</U>orporation) from 1937, and perhaps made large format cameras.<REF> See [http://kans1948.zero-yen.com/html/p108.html this page at Kan's Room]. </REF> It also published a photographic magazine, ''[[Photo-Times]].''
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'''Oriental Shashin Kōgyō K.K.''' (オリエンタル写真工業株式会社, translated by Oriental Photo Industrial Corporation) was a Japanese film maker founded in 1919. It used the Orient, Peacock and OK trademarks.<REF> Lewis, p.&nbsp;30. </REF> It used an OPIC logo (presumably for <U>O</U>riental <U>P</U>hoto <U>I</U>ndustrial <U>C</U>orporation) from 1937, and perhaps made large format cameras.<REF> See [http://kans1948.zero-yen.com/html/p108.html this page at Kan's Room]. </REF> It also published a photographic magazine, ''[[Photo-Times]].'' It reportedly made field cameras in the 1920s.<REF> {{Sugiyama}}, item 1014. </REF>
  
 
It is said that the company [[Tōyō Kōki]], which made the [[Peacock]] cameras from 1939, was a dependent of Oriental.<REF> Dependent of Oriental: Fujishima and Nakamura, p.&nbsp;161 of {{KKS}} no.&nbsp;10, say ''keiretsu kaisha'' (系列会社). See also {{Kokusan}}, p.&nbsp;339. </REF> It was merged into the main company in 1944, becoming its optical instruments branch (光機部門), dissolved in 1945.<REF> See [http://kans1948.zero-yen.com/html/p108.html this page at Kan's Room]. </REF>
 
It is said that the company [[Tōyō Kōki]], which made the [[Peacock]] cameras from 1939, was a dependent of Oriental.<REF> Dependent of Oriental: Fujishima and Nakamura, p.&nbsp;161 of {{KKS}} no.&nbsp;10, say ''keiretsu kaisha'' (系列会社). See also {{Kokusan}}, p.&nbsp;339. </REF> It was merged into the main company in 1944, becoming its optical instruments branch (光機部門), dissolved in 1945.<REF> See [http://kans1948.zero-yen.com/html/p108.html this page at Kan's Room]. </REF>
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* Fujishima Kōichi (藤島広一), Nakamura Kin (中村欽). "Kurashikku kamera Q&A" (クラシックカメラQ&A, Classic camera questions and answers). {{KKS010}} Pp.&nbsp;159&ndash;61.
 
* Fujishima Kōichi (藤島広一), Nakamura Kin (中村欽). "Kurashikku kamera Q&A" (クラシックカメラQ&A, Classic camera questions and answers). {{KKS010}} Pp.&nbsp;159&ndash;61.
 
* {{Lewis}} P.&nbsp;30.
 
* {{Lewis}} P.&nbsp;30.
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* {{Zukan}} Item 1014.
  
 
== Links ==
 
== Links ==
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* [http://kans1948.zero-yen.com/html/p108.html Oriental large format camera] at [http://kans1948.zero-yen.com/ Kan's Room], reproducing an e-mail sent from an employee of Cyber Graphics about the history of the company
 
* [http://kans1948.zero-yen.com/html/p108.html Oriental large format camera] at [http://kans1948.zero-yen.com/ Kan's Room], reproducing an e-mail sent from an employee of Cyber Graphics about the history of the company
  
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[[Category: Japanese camera makers]]
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[[Category: Japanese companies]]
 
[[Category: Film makers]]
 
[[Category: Film makers]]
[[Category: Japanese companies]]
 

Revision as of 17:44, 7 June 2007

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Oriental Shashin Kōgyō K.K. (オリエンタル写真工業株式会社, translated by Oriental Photo Industrial Corporation) was a Japanese film maker founded in 1919. It used the Orient, Peacock and OK trademarks.[1] It used an OPIC logo (presumably for Oriental Photo Industrial Corporation) from 1937, and perhaps made large format cameras.[2] It also published a photographic magazine, Photo-Times. It reportedly made field cameras in the 1920s.[3]

It is said that the company Tōyō Kōki, which made the Peacock cameras from 1939, was a dependent of Oriental.[4] It was merged into the main company in 1944, becoming its optical instruments branch (光機部門), dissolved in 1945.[5]

The company became Cyber Graphics at an unknown date and still (2007) exists under that name.

Notes

  1. Lewis, p. 30.
  2. See this page at Kan's Room.
  3. Sugiyama, item 1014.
  4. Dependent of Oriental: Fujishima and Nakamura, p. 161 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no. 10, say keiretsu kaisha (系列会社). See also Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 339.
  5. See this page at Kan's Room.

Bibliography

Links