Pearl (for plates and rollfilm)

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Japanese plate cameras, folding bed (edit)
No.0 (4×5cm) Alpha | Sweet | Pony Sweet | Taishō-shiki
atom (4.5×6cm) Monarch | Need | Palma
meishi (5.5×8cm) Eagle | Idea A | Idea B | Idea Snap | Idea No.1 | Iris | Lily (horizontal) | Pearl No.3 | Special Camera | Venis | X
daimeishi (6.5×9cm) Apollo | Arcadia | Crite | Special East | Eaton | Elliotte | First | First Etui | Gold | Happy | Hope | Idea No.1 | Idea (metal) | Kinka | Kokka | Lily (horizontal) | Lily (metal) | Tropical Lily | Lloyd | Lomax | Masnette | Mikuni | Need | Nifca Klapp | Nifca Sport | Ohca | Palma | Peter | Prince | Prince Peerless | Proud | Romax | Rosen | Rubies | Sirius | Sun | Super | Tokiwa | Venus | Weha Idea | Weha Light
tefuda (8×10.5cm) Eagle | Idea A | Idea B | Idea No.1 | Idea (metal) | Iris | Lily (original) | Lily (horizontal) | Lily (metal) | Palma | Pearl No.3, No.4 | Minimum Pearl | Special Pearl | Sakura Palace | Sakura Pocket Prano | Star | Tokiwa | Weha
nimaigake (8×12cm) Eagle | Idea | Idea Binocular | Sakura Prano | Sakura Binocular Prano | Star Premo
hagaki (8×14cm) Eagle | Noble | Pearl No.3, No.4 | Star
kabine (12×16.5cm) Idea | Noble | Sakura Prano | Star Premo
Japanese plate film: monocular, box, strut-folding and SLR ->
3×4 and 4×4, 4×5 and 4×6.5, 4.5×6, 6×6 and 6×9 ->
Japanese older 6×9 (edit)
folding First Center | First Roll | Kinka Roll | Lyra (6×9) | Pearl No.3 | Pearl No.2 | Year-Eight Pearl | Reex | Royal Junior
box Dox | Sakura (box)
3×4 and 4×4, 4×5 and 4×6.5, 4.5×6, 6×6 and plate ->
Modern 6×9 RF and SLR ->
This is a work in progress.

The name Pearl (パール) was given by Konishi Honten and Konishiroku Honten (the later Konica) to many models of rollfilm folders.[1] This article deals with the early models taking both film plates and rollfilm.

See also the Pearl No.2, the self-erecting 6×9 Pearl, the 4.5×6 Pearl; and, for 127 film, the Baby Pearl and Pearlette.

Common features

All the models are vertical folders, and none is self-erecting: the front standard has to be pulled out manually after the folding bed is opened. They have a mixed construction, with a wooden main body and a folding bed made of metal. All the cameras have focusing rails, a distance scale on the photographer's left and a leather handle at the top. The back is detachable as a whole for film loading; its center part contains a single uncovered red window, and can be replaced by a ground glass holder or plate holders. The film spools are loaded in removable metal inserts, complete with film rollers. The name The Pearl is inscribed on a round nameplate attached to the photographer's left, except perhaps on the earliest cameras (see below).

The tefuda models

The Pearl Hand Camera No.3 and No.4

The original model was released by Konishi Honten in January 1909[2] as the Pearl Hand Camera (パール手提暗函).[3] It was a copy of the No.3 Folding Pocket Kodak, but for tefuda (3¼×4¼ in.) format plates as well as 118 film.[4]

The front standard is similar to that of the original Lily Hand Camera. It mainly consists of two cylindrical masts, and allows horizontal and vertical movements. A hooded brilliant finder is perched atop the left-hand mast, and a bubble level is attached to it; the camera has no other viewfinder.

The camera exists in two models: the No.3 (3号) has single extension bellows and the No.4 (4号) has double extension bellows driven by a wheel on the photographer's right. The No.4 looks very much like an original Lily with a removable back and spool compartments added at both ends.

An advertisement probably dated 1909 shows an illustration of the Pearl Hand Camera No.3 with three plate holders, the ground glass holder and the rollfilm back.[5] The pictured camera has the film advance key at the bottom right, as seen by the photographer, and has straight struts for the folding bed. The following versions are listed:[6]

  • No.3, Symmetrical lens, Simplex shutter, ¥40;
  • No.4, Symmetrical lens, Auto shutter, ¥48;
  • No.4, Carl Zeiss Tessar Ser.IIIa No.1 lens (f/9),[7] Auto shutter, ¥93;
  • Carl Zeiss Tessar Ser.IIb No.4 lens (135/6.3),[7] ¥135.

The case was available for ¥3 extra.

The December 1911 catalogue by Konishi Honten shows the same illustration, and lists the following versions:[8]

  • No.3, Rapid Rectilinear lens, Simplex shutter, ¥28;
  • No.4, Symmetrical lens, Auto shutter, ¥43;
  • No.4, Extra Aplanat lens, Compound shutter, ¥60;
  • Carl Zeiss Tessar Ser.IIb No.4 lens (135/6.3),[7] ¥115.

All the prices are given for the rollfilm camera alone. The set of three double-sided plate holders and one ground glass holder was sold separately, for ¥4.50, and a case was available for ¥3 extra. Other lens and shutter options were certainly available, at the customer's request.

At least one surviving example of the No.3 is known with the advance key at the bottom right and the older folding struts; it has a PEARL nameplate at the base of the front standard and it is perhaps missing the round nameplate on the side.[9] Its lens is a Bausch & Lomb Rapid Rectilinear f/8 and its shutter only has T, B, I settings.

The Pearl No.3 and No.4

The model name was simplified to Pearl No.3 (パール3号) and No.4 (4号) at some time. The camera was modified at about the same time, as indicated by an illustration of an original advertisement.[10] The film running direction was switched, and the advance key was accordingly moved to the top left. The folding struts were also replaced by thinner arched struts. A third, wider type of folding struts is known on some surviving examples. (These second and third types are similar to the struts observed on the original Lily.)

Most surviving examples belong to that period; they have been observed in the following versions:

  • No.3, simple f/8 lens, Victo shutter (T, B, 100–10), thin struts;[11]
  • No.3, simple f/8 lens, Victo shutter (T, B, 100–10), wide struts;[12]
  • No.3, Wollensak Voltas f/8 lens, Gammax shutter (T, B, 100–10), wide struts;[13]
  • No.4, Goerz Dagor 125/6.8 lens, Kodak pneumatic shutter (T, B, 1–100), thin struts;[14]
  • No.4, Wollensak Voltas f/8 lens, Victo shutter (T, B, 100–10), wide struts;[15]

The Special Pearl

The Special Pearl (スペシャルパール) added a folding viewfinder, and had a Deltas f/6.8 or Velostigmat Series IV f/6.3 lens in tefuda format or a Velostigmat Series IV f/6.3 or f/7.5 lens for 4×5 in. format.[16]

The Minimum Pearl

The postcard models

The meishi model

Notes

  1. "Pearl" is written in roman script on most or all of these models. In Japanese, the line was and is called Pāru (i.e. the English word "Pearl" within Japanese phonology); the Japanese word for "pearl" is shinju (真珠), but this does not seem ever to have been applied to the camera. None of the cameras dealt with in this article was exported, and it is unlikely that any was either labeled or advertised with any roman script other than "Pearl" or "The Pearl". Thus the choice of names within this article is sometimes difficult.
  2. Release date: chronology from the official company history Shashin to tomo ni hyaku-nen, reproduced in Tanaka, p.94 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.10; this is repeated in Kikuoka, p.24 of the same magazine, and in this page of the Center of the History of Japanese Industrial Technology. The date is simply given as 1909 in the chronology at R. Konishi Rokuoh-sha.
  3. The phrase tesage anbako (手提暗函) is rendered as "Hand Camera" in the Konishi catalogue dated December 1911. In modern sources, it is often translated as "Portable Camera" and the camera called "Pearl Portable". The Japanese word anbako literally means "dark box"; it was modeled after "camera obscura" and was used for cameras until around the 1910s.
  4. Copy of the No.3 Folding Pocket Kodak: Lewis, p.33.
  5. Advertisement reproduced in this page at R. Konishi Rokuoh-sha (at the top).
  6. The same versions are listed in Tanaka, p.25 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.10.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Lens features: December 1911 catalogue of Konishi Honten, pp.40–1.
  8. December 1911 catalogue of Konishi Honten, p.15. The advertisement reproduced at the bottom of this page at R. Konishi Rokuoh-sha is very similar to the catalogue entry, and gives the same price list.
  9. Example pictured in Sugiyama, item 1107 (where it is called "The Pearl III").
  10. Illustration reproduced in this page at R. Konishi Rokuoh-sha, showing the 1914 tefuda-size Pearl No.3.
  11. Example pictured in Sugiyama, item 1106 (where it is called "The Pearl II" by mistake), and in this page at Neco's collection.
  12. Examples pictured in Tanaka, p.24 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.10, and in this page at Neco's collection.
  13. Example pictured in this page.
  14. Example pictured in Sugiyama, item 1108 (where it is called "The Pearl IV").
  15. Example pictured in Tanaka, p.24 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.10. The lens engraving is very similar to that of the camera pictured in this page; this is why it is most certainly a Voltas.
  16. Japanese Historical Camera, p.6; Lewis, ed., History of the Japanese Camera, p.33; Konika-Minoruta-ten, p.5.

Sources and further reading

Links

In Japanese:


Konishiroku prewar and wartime cameras (edit)
plate hand cameras stereo hand cameras strut folders box telephoto SLR
Idea (original) | Idea A | Idea B | Idea Snap | Idea No.1 | Idea (metal) | Lily (original) | Lily (horizontal) | Lily (metal) | Tropical Lily | Noble | Ohca | Sakura Palace | Sakura Pocket Prano | Sakura Prano Idea Binocular | Sakura Binocular Prano Minimum Idea | Idea Spring | Korok Champion | Cherry | Sakura Army | Sakura Honor | Sakura Navy Idea Telephoto Idea Reflex (1910 and 1911) | Idea Reflex (1932) | Neat Reflex | Sakura Reflex Prano
rollfilm folders box or collapsible TLR
Pearlette | Special Pearlette | B Pearlette | Pearl (for plates and rollfilm) | Pearl No.2 | Pearl (Year 8) | Baby Pearl | Semi Pearl | Sakura Palace Record | Sakura (box) | Sakura (bakelite) Sakura-flex