Difference between revisions of "Prince"

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After the war, the company [[Tōyō Seiki Kōgaku]] made 6×6 TLR cameras called [[Princeflex]] and [[Princeflex|Prince Junior]], distributed by [[Misuzu Shōkai]]. These cameras were sometimes advertised with the mention of Prince Camera Works and the ''P.C.W.'' logo.
 
After the war, the company [[Tōyō Seiki Kōgaku]] made 6×6 TLR cameras called [[Princeflex]] and [[Princeflex|Prince Junior]], distributed by [[Misuzu Shōkai]]. These cameras were sometimes advertised with the mention of Prince Camera Works and the ''P.C.W.'' logo.
  
At about the same time, a probably different company called [[Tōkyō Seiki]] or [[Doris|Doris Camera]] was using the Doris name again on various models.
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At about the same time, a different company called [[Tōkyō Seiki]] and later Doris Camera, probably unrelated, was using the Doris name again on various models.
  
 
== Cameras ==
 
== Cameras ==

Revision as of 18:28, 20 October 2006

Prince Camera Works is a Japanese entity, associated with many cameras called Prince, and whose history is not entirely clear.

History

Before the war

The name Prince Camera Works is first associated with prewar Japanese cameras distributed by the company Fukada Shōkai. It appears in original advertisements and on some products[1], either in its full form or through a P.C.W. logo. All these products were distributed by the company Fukada Shōkai, and it seems probable that it was the actual owner of the Prince trademark.

The exact status of Prince Camera Works is not very clear. The simplest and most obvious theory is that Prince Camera Works was a camera maker.

However there are some doubts. It is said by many sources[2] that the Semi Prince, a camera associated with Prince Camera Works in original advertisements, was actually manufactured by Fujimoto. On that basis, some sources[3] attribute to Fujimoto all the other cameras named Prince and associated with Prince Camera Works. This leads to the theory that Prince Camera Works was just an alternative name for Fujimoto, used by the distributor Fukada Shōkai to hide the real maker's name. However the company history at the Fujimoto official website only mentions the Semi Prince as Fujimoto's first camera in 1934, and does not mention other Prince cameras.

It also seems that the Prince Flex, another camera associated with Prince Camera Works in original advertisements, was developed by Neumann & Heilemann, or in cooperation with this company. A rumor says that Neumann & Heilemann merged with the Prince factory and that the Prince Flex was the first resulting product.[4]

It seems probable that the trademark Prince was owned by the distributor Fukada Shōkai. Perhaps Prince Camera Works was a company associated with Fukada, that made some of the cameras called Prince but not all of them, or perhaps it was just a name used to hide the fact that the cameras were bought to various manufacturers.

Postwar developments

After the war, the company Tōyō Seiki Kōgaku made 6×6 TLR cameras called Princeflex and Prince Junior, distributed by Misuzu Shōkai. These cameras were sometimes advertised with the mention of Prince Camera Works and the P.C.W. logo.

At about the same time, a different company called Tōkyō Seiki and later Doris Camera, probably unrelated, was using the Doris name again on various models.

Cameras

Here are cameras known to be associated with Prince Camera Works in original advertisements, either through the full name or through the P.C.W. logo:

Here are other cameras called Prince and advertised by Fukada Shōkai:

A 6.5×9 plate folder simply called Prince is also reported.[5]

Here are two other cameras advertised by Fukada Shōkai in a context associating them with the models above:[6]

Postwar Prince cameras:

Notes

  1. For example an accessory rangefinder observed in a Yahoo Japan auction.
  2. Company history of the Fujimoto official website; Lewis, p. 53; Supuringu kamera de ikou, pp. 78–80; McKeown, pp. 331–2.
  3. Including McKeown, p. 331–2.
  4. This is mentioned as a rumor in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 340.
  5. McKeown, p. 331.
  6. They are attributed to Prince Camera Works by McKeown, p. 803.

Bibliography

Links