Welmy 44

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The Welmy 44 (ウエルミー44) is a Japanese coupled-rangefinder camera taking 4×4cm exposures on 127 film. It was made by Taisei Kōki in 1959[1], during the short-lived fashion revival of 4×4cm format, also called "super slides".

Description

The Welmy 44 has a combined range- and viewfinder. The name Welmy 44 is engraved on the top plate and a square 44 nameplate is attached to the front leather. The advance knob is at the top right and it both winds the film and cocks the shutter. There is double exposure prevention and multiple exposures are possible. It is not known if there is an auto-stop device or not, and it is said that there is a red window in the back.

The Welmy Terionon 50mm f/3.5 lens is unit-focused by a large focusing ring. It is mounted in a Welmy leaf shutter said to give B, 5–300 speeds.[2]

Commercial life

The Welmy 44 was offered for ¥7,900 in an advertisement dated February 1959.[3] It was only sold for a short time, and only one surviving example is known, pictured in Sugiyama.[4]

Notes

  1. Date: Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 378.
  2. Speeds: Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 378, Sugiyama item 3076.
  3. Published in Nihon Camera, reproduced in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 223.
  4. Sugiyama item 3076.

Bibliography