Difference between revisions of "Tenar lenses"

From Camera-wiki.org
Jump to: navigation, search
(new page, on a lesser known lens)
 
m (Cameras equipped with Tenar lenses: alphabetical order)
Line 16: Line 16:
 
* [[First plate folders|First and Special First]] (advertised c.1935, surviving example shown in {{SUG}})<REF> {{SUG}}, item 1043. </REF>
 
* [[First plate folders|First and Special First]] (advertised c.1935, surviving example shown in {{SUG}})<REF> {{SUG}}, item 1043. </REF>
 
* [[Gold plate folders|Gold]] (advertised c.1934)
 
* [[Gold plate folders|Gold]] (advertised c.1934)
 +
* [[Kinka Roll]] (advertised c.1937)
 
* [[Kokka]] (advertised c.1935)
 
* [[Kokka]] (advertised c.1935)
* [[Kinka Roll]] (advertised c.1937)
 
 
* [[Super plate folders|Super and Special Super]] (advertised c.1935)
 
* [[Super plate folders|Super and Special Super]] (advertised c.1935)
  

Revision as of 15:47, 13 October 2009

The Tenar lenses were mounted on a few Japanese cameras in the mid 1930s.

Documents

The Tenar name is mentioned in various period advertisements, but the original documents found so far do not specify the actual manufacturer or distributor of the lenses. The lens was only offered on 6×9cm or 6.5×9cm cameras (whose standard focal length is 10.5cm), and the documents only mention f/4.5 aperture.

The Tenar 10.5cm f/4.5 lens pictured below is mounted in a Rulex B shutter (5–150, B, T) by Neumann & Heilemann. Its front bezel is engraved Tenar 1:4,5 f=10,5cm Neumann Jena Nr xxxxxx. The marking surely indicates that the lens was assembled and sold by Neumann & Heilemann. The word "Jena" was surely added to deceive the customer into thinking that the lens was made in Germany — though the Tenar might have been assembled from imported optical glass or loose elements.

Cameras equipped with Tenar lenses

Not all the versions of the cameras listed below had Tenar lenses:

Notes

  1. Sugiyama, item 1043.

Bibliography