Difference between revisions of "Walz"

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'''Walz''' was a Japanese camera maker or distributor. The first camera with the name [[Walz]] appeared in 1936, distributed by [[Nihon Shōkai]] and made by '''Walz Camera Works''' (ワルツカメラ・ウオークス) or '''Walz Works''' (ワルツウオークス). This maker is identified to [[Okada|Okada Kōgaku]] by {{Kokusan}}.
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'''Walz''' was a Japanese camera maker or distributor. The [[Walz (original)|first camera with the name Walz]] appeared in 1936, distributed by [[Nihon Shōkai]] and made by '''Walz Camera Works''' (ワルツカメラ・ウオークス) or '''Walz Works''' (ワルツウオークス). This maker is identified to [[Okada|Okada Kōgaku]] by {{Kokusan}}.
  
 
The company '''K.K. Walz Shōkai''' (株式会社ワルツ商会) was founded in Dec 1952. Shōkai literally means "Company" in Japanese, but it is often used for trading companies, and this looks like a distributor's name. It does not mean however that it did not have its own manufacturing branch.
 
The company '''K.K. Walz Shōkai''' (株式会社ワルツ商会) was founded in Dec 1952. Shōkai literally means "Company" in Japanese, but it is often used for trading companies, and this looks like a distributor's name. It does not mean however that it did not have its own manufacturing branch.

Revision as of 21:27, 30 June 2006

Walz was a Japanese camera maker or distributor. The first camera with the name Walz appeared in 1936, distributed by Nihon Shōkai and made by Walz Camera Works (ワルツカメラ・ウオークス) or Walz Works (ワルツウオークス). This maker is identified to Okada Kōgaku by Kokusan kamera no rekishi.

The company K.K. Walz Shōkai (株式会社ワルツ商会) was founded in Dec 1952. Shōkai literally means "Company" in Japanese, but it is often used for trading companies, and this looks like a distributor's name. It does not mean however that it did not have its own manufacturing branch.

Walz sold cameras under its own name and was also an Olympus authorized dealer, at least in 1954. It went bankrupt in April 1961, according to The History of the Japanese Camera.

Walz also sold many accessories, including filters, selftimers, exposure meters, rangefinders, multifocal finders (including a copy of the Leitz Imarect), flash units, movie editors, etc.

Note: A post at a Japanese forum indicates that Walz's president was Ōta Toshio (太田俊夫), and that he wrote a novel titled Keikaku Tōsan (計画倒産, Fake Bankruptcy) about the business world of the time.

120 film cameras

4.5×6 folder

6×6 folder

6×6 TLR

127 film cameras

35mm film cameras

  • Walz 35
  • Walz 35-S
  • Walz Electric
  • Walz Envoy 35
  • Walz Envoy M-35
  • Walz Wide

References / further reading

  • Asahi Camera (アサヒカメラ) editorial staff. Shōwa 10–40nen kōkoku ni miru kokusan kamera no rekishi (昭和10〜40年広告にみる国産カメラの歴史, Japanese camera history as seen in advertisements, 1935–1965). Tokyo: Asahi Shinbunsha, 1994. ISBN 4-02-330312-7
  • Lewis, Gordon, ed. The History of the Japanese Camera. Rochester, N.Y.: George Eastman House, International Museum of Photography & Film, 1991. ISBN 0-935398-17-1 (paper) ISBN 0-935398-16-3 (hard)

Links

In English:

In Japanese: