Difference between revisions of "Plaubel"

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[[Category: Camera makers]]
 
[[Category: Camera makers]]
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[[Category: Japanese camera makers]]
 
[[Category: Lens makers]]
 
[[Category: Lens makers]]
 
[[Category: Plaubel|*]]
 
[[Category: Plaubel|*]]
 
[[Category: Germany]]
 
[[Category: Germany]]
[[Category: Japanese companies]]
 

Revision as of 15:41, 9 September 2006

Plaubel was originally a German camera maker, founded in 1902 by Hugo Schrader as a distributor and lens maker. It began the production of cameras in 1910. It became famous for the Makina series of press cameras, introduced as early as 1911 and withdrawn around 1960. After the war, it also made monorail view cameras, and a big 6x9 SLR called Makiflex. In 1975 it was bought by Kimio Doi and effectively became a Japanese company. It launched a modernized successor to the Makina, called the Makina 67, in cooperation with Konica, and later with Mamiya. It stopped the production in 1986.

Film plates or cut film

4.5x6 strut folding

6.5x9 strut folding

With adaptors for 120 film.

45x107mm stereo strut folding

6x13 stereo strut folding

120 film

6x6 folding

6x7 strut folding

6x9 SLR

  • Makiflex
  • Pecoflex

127 film

16mm film