Difference between revisions of "Yallu Flex"

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== Sources / further reading ==
 
== Sources / further reading ==
* Hagiya Takeshi (萩谷剛). "Airesu no kamera: Yarūfurekkusu soshite 6×6-han niganrefu, 35mm kamera e" (アイレスのカメラ:ヤルーフレックスそして6×6判二眼レフ、35mmカメラへ, The Aires cameras: From the Yallu Flex to 6×6 TLRs and 35mm cameras). Chapter 5 of {{Zunow10}}
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* Hagiya Takeshi (萩谷剛). "Airesu no kamera: Yarū Furekkusu soshite 6×6-han niganrefu, 35mm kamera e" (アイレスのカメラ:ヤルーフレックスそして6×6判二眼レフ、35mmカメラへ, The Aires cameras: From the Yallu Flex to 6×6 TLRs and 35mm cameras). Chapter 5 of {{Zunow10}} First published as an article in {{KKS}} no.22.
* {{KKS035}}
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* Hagiya Takeshi (萩谷剛). "Yunīku-na keitai no 35mm nigan-refu: Yarū Furekkusu" (ユニークな形態の35mm二眼レフ:ヤルーフレックス, A 35mm TLR with a unique shape: the Yallu Flex). {{KKS035}} P.120.
* ''Watakushi no ni-gan-refu kamera-ten'' (私の二眼レフカメラ展, Exhibition of twin lens reflex cameras). Tokyo: JCII Camera Museum, 1992. (Exhibition catalogue, no ISBN number.) P. 32.
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* Kuno Mikio (久野幹雄). "35mm-han nigan-refu no sekai" (35mm判二眼レフの世界, The world of 35mm TLRs.) {{KKS010}} Pp.128–30.
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* ''Watakushi no ni-gan-refu kamera-ten'' (私の二眼レフカメラ展, Exhibition of twin lens reflex cameras). Tokyo: JCII Camera Museum, 1992. (Exhibition catalogue, no ISBN number.) P.32.
  
 
== Links ==
 
== Links ==

Revision as of 12:32, 5 January 2008

Japanese 35mm TLR (edit)
24×36mm Haco 35 | Hulda 35 | Samocaflex 35 | Toyoca 35 | Yallu Flex
Japanese 4×4 TLR, 6×6 TLR and pseudo TLR ->

The Yallu Flex (ヤルーフレックス) is a 35mm TLR produced as a prototype in 1949 by Yallu Optical Co Ltd (ヤルー光学, Yarū Kōgaku), a company formed afresh for the purpose. It was named after the Yalu river.[1]

The Yallu Flex (sometimes referred to as "Yalluflex") was influenced by the Zeiss Contaflex, which was available in Japan at a very high price and was of particular interest in view of the patchy availability of roll film. The Yallu Flex was ingeniously and elegantly designed and was well equipped and appealingly advertised, but in the end it was never offered for sale: it is said that potential dealers were unimpressed by the prototypes that they received. About fifty were produced.

Yallu Optical survived the disappointment, renaming itself Aires and bringing out 120 TLRs and other cameras.

Notes

  1. Or perhaps after the American pronunciation of the name of this river (in Chinese Yālǜjiāng, 鴨綠江, 鸭绿江; in Korean Amnokkang, 압록강; in Japanese Ōryokkō 鴨緑江). See the English Wikipedia page about the Yalu River.

Sources / further reading

Links

In English:

In Japanese: