Difference between revisions of "Yasuhara"

From Camera-wiki.org
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Links: <!--Commented out link, page no longer present/availabe, please remove if not returned by 10/2015 -->)
m (Further reading: Redirected Link URL to archived version)
 
(12 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{NeedPhotos}}'''Yasuhara Co. Ltd.''' (安原製作所, ''Yasuhara Seisakusho'') was a small Japanese company that between 1998 and 2004 produced two rangefinder cameras, the Leica-thread-mount '''[[Yasuhara T981|T981]]''' or ''Isshiki'' (一式) and the fixed-lens '''[[Yasuhara T012|T012]]''' or ''Akizuki'' (秋月).
+
{{Flickr_image
 +
|image_source= http://www.flickr.com/photos/kr0nk0/12264996735/in/pool-camerawiki/
 +
|image=  http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7365/12264996735_c6538a0951.jpg
 +
|image_align= right
 +
|image_text= Sony A7R, with Yasuhara Nanoha Tube
 +
|image_by= kr0nk0
 +
|image_rights= wp
 +
}}
 +
'''Yasuhara Co. Ltd.''' (安原製作所, ''Yasuhara Seisakusho'') was a small Japanese company that between 1998 and 2004 produced two rangefinder cameras, the Leica-thread-mount '''[[Yasuhara T981|T981]]''' or ''Isshiki'' (一式) and the fixed-lens '''[[Yasuhara T012|T012]]''' or ''Akizuki'' (秋月).
  
Yasuhara was founded by Mr Yasuhara Shin (安原伸), who had previously worked for [[Kyocera]], in November 1988. It described itself as "in scale, the world's smallest camera maker" (''kibo-teki ni, sekai-saishō kamera mēkā''). "Maker" here probably means "designer and marketer": most if not all of the company's products are believed to have been manufactured in China.
+
Yasuhara was founded by Mr Yasuhara Shin (安原伸), who had previously worked for [[Kyocera]], in November 1988. It described itself as "in scale, the world's smallest camera maker" (''kibo-teki ni, sekai-saishō kamera mēkā''). "Maker" here probably means "designer and marketer": most if not all of the company's products are believed to have been manufactured in China by [[Phenix]]. They have also distributed cameras such as the [[Great Wall PF-1|PF-1]] and '''Wide Pan Pro II''' in Japan.
  
 
Yasuhara also produced a Yasuhara MC 50mm f:2.8 [[Leica thread mount]] lens.
 
Yasuhara also produced a Yasuhara MC 50mm f:2.8 [[Leica thread mount]] lens.
  
 
The company's address was Komazawa 1&ndash;17&ndash;17, Setagaya-ku, Tokyo. It closed in February 2004, citing the unexpectedly fast reduction in the market for silver-based photography.
 
The company's address was Komazawa 1&ndash;17&ndash;17, Setagaya-ku, Tokyo. It closed in February 2004, citing the unexpectedly fast reduction in the market for silver-based photography.
 +
 +
The company in 2007 then reemerged and started focusing on lenses mainly for mirrorless digital cameras. As of writing 2016 a fisheye, macro lens are available along with dedicated tripod mount for the fisheye.
 +
Most notably though is the release in 2015 of their remake of the lens from Kodak's Vest Pocket camera. Their lens is named Momo, meaning 100 in traditional Japanese, in celebration of the [[Vest Pocket Kodak]] that first came out in 1912. The purpose of reviving this lens is the noted full aperture soft focus effects that Kodak had restricted by making the opening in the Vest Pocket cameras lens hood smaller than the actual lens.
 +
==Products==
 +
===Cameras===
 +
* [[Yasuhara T981]] - 1999
 +
* [[Yasuhara T012]] - 2003
 +
 +
===Lens===
 +
{{Flickr image
 +
| image_source= http://www.flickr.com/heritagefutures/8195655798/in/pool-camerawiki/
 +
| image= http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8060/8195655798_7727311823_m.jpg
 +
| image_align= right
 +
| image_text=Vest Pocket Kodak lens
 +
| image_by=Dirk HR Spennemann
 +
| image_rights=wp
 +
}}
 +
* MC Yasuhara 50mm f/2.8
 +
* Madoka 180 4/7.3 Fisheye - 2012
 +
* Momo 100 (mount in EF, NF, E, M)
 +
* Nanoha X5 and Nanoha Tube - 2010
 +
* Nodal Ninja Fisheye
  
 
== Links ==
 
== Links ==
Line 12: Line 42:
 
** [http://web.archive.org/web/20031210215630/www.yasuhara.co.jp/jpn/products/lens/top.html Yasuhara lens]
 
** [http://web.archive.org/web/20031210215630/www.yasuhara.co.jp/jpn/products/lens/top.html Yasuhara lens]
 
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20040202005154/http://www.yasuhara.co.jp/close.html Yasuhara's message about its closure] (February 2004): in Japanese (set your browser to Shift-JIS)
 
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20040202005154/http://www.yasuhara.co.jp/close.html Yasuhara's message about its closure] (February 2004): in Japanese (set your browser to Shift-JIS)
* [http://www.yasuhara.co.jp/ Yasuhara's farewell message] (in Japanese)
+
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20210908025930/http://www.yasuhara.co.jp/ Yasuhara's farewell message] (in Japanese) (archived)
 +
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20210906014027/http://www.yasuhara.co.jp/momo/ Yasuhara Momo page] (in Japanese) (archived)
 
* [http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/安原製作所 Wikipedia article] (in Japanese)
 
* [http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/安原製作所 Wikipedia article] (in Japanese)
* [http://www.vividcar.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/f1b8d82887.woa/wa/read/f3ffa9eb2a/ A visit to Yasuhara] by Matsubara Atsushi at [http://www.vividcar.com vividcar.com] (in Japanese)
+
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20171109075035/http://www.vividcar.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/f1b8d82887.woa/wa/read/f3ffa9eb2a/ A visit to Yasuhara] by Matsubara Atsushi at [http://www.vividcar.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/1192cafa25b.woa/ vividcar.com] (in Japanese) (archived)
<!--Commented out link, page no longer present/availabe, please remove if not returned by 10/2015 * [http://www.collection-appareils.fr/general/html/listeY_imagettes.php#Yasuhara Camera] at www.collection-appareils.fr -->
 
  
 
==Further reading==
 
==Further reading==
* Article in [http://www.president.co.jp/pre/19990300/index.html ''Purejidento'', March 1999] <!-- not seen -->
+
* Article in [https://web.archive.org/web/20021202180524/http://www.president.co.jp/pre/19990300/index.html ''Purejidento'', March 1999] (archived)
  
 
[[Category: Japanese camera makers]]
 
[[Category: Japanese camera makers]]
 
[[Category: Japanese lens makers]]
 
[[Category: Japanese lens makers]]
 
[[Category: China]]
 
[[Category: China]]

Latest revision as of 04:31, 19 October 2023

Yasuhara Co. Ltd. (安原製作所, Yasuhara Seisakusho) was a small Japanese company that between 1998 and 2004 produced two rangefinder cameras, the Leica-thread-mount T981 or Isshiki (一式) and the fixed-lens T012 or Akizuki (秋月).

Yasuhara was founded by Mr Yasuhara Shin (安原伸), who had previously worked for Kyocera, in November 1988. It described itself as "in scale, the world's smallest camera maker" (kibo-teki ni, sekai-saishō kamera mēkā). "Maker" here probably means "designer and marketer": most if not all of the company's products are believed to have been manufactured in China by Phenix. They have also distributed cameras such as the PF-1 and Wide Pan Pro II in Japan.

Yasuhara also produced a Yasuhara MC 50mm f:2.8 Leica thread mount lens.

The company's address was Komazawa 1–17–17, Setagaya-ku, Tokyo. It closed in February 2004, citing the unexpectedly fast reduction in the market for silver-based photography.

The company in 2007 then reemerged and started focusing on lenses mainly for mirrorless digital cameras. As of writing 2016 a fisheye, macro lens are available along with dedicated tripod mount for the fisheye. Most notably though is the release in 2015 of their remake of the lens from Kodak's Vest Pocket camera. Their lens is named Momo, meaning 100 in traditional Japanese, in celebration of the Vest Pocket Kodak that first came out in 1912. The purpose of reviving this lens is the noted full aperture soft focus effects that Kodak had restricted by making the opening in the Vest Pocket cameras lens hood smaller than the actual lens.

Products

Cameras

Lens

  • MC Yasuhara 50mm f/2.8
  • Madoka 180 4/7.3 Fisheye - 2012
  • Momo 100 (mount in EF, NF, E, M)
  • Nanoha X5 and Nanoha Tube - 2010
  • Nodal Ninja Fisheye

Links

Further reading