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Nikkō also means "sunlight" and is the name of a Japanese town.) In 1933, Nikon marketed its first camera lens under the Nikkor brand name, the "Aero-NIKKOR," for aerial photography. [1] Nikon originally reserved the Nikkor designation for its highest-quality imaging optics, but in recent history almost all Nikon lenses are so branded.
The Nikon Amusing Lenses (ニコン おもしろレンズ工房) are a limited production set of four toy lenses for the Nikon F mount sold exclusively in Japan. The Amusing Lenses were designed by Kouichi Ohshita and introduced in 1995, then discontinued in 1996; they were re-released in 2000 as the Fun Fun LensSet , which was discontinued ...
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Nikkormat (Nikomat in Japan) was a brand of cameras produced by the Japanese optics company Nippon Kogaku K. K., as a consumer version of the professional Nikon brand. . Nikkormat cameras, produced from 1965 until 1978, were simpler and more affordable than Nikon-branded cameras, but accepted the same lenses as the Nikon F serie
The company replaced this lens in 2016 with a version offering the same focal length range but a constant maximum aperture of f/4. The Sigma 8–16mm , introduced in 2010, a rectilinear ultra-wide zoom designed for DSLRs with APS-C sensors, providing essentially the same 35mm equivalent field of view as the company's 12–24mm offering on full ...
A Century at Nikon 光と精密、100年の足跡 A wall display introducing the history of Nikon from its inception in 1917 to present times. Synthetic Silica Glass Ingot A 130cm long silica glass ingot, shaped like a lens tube, represents the materials used for the production of Nikon's top-of-the-line optics during the last 100 years.
The Nikon FM is a mechanically operated, interchangeable lens, 35 mm film, single-lens reflex (SLR) camera. It was manufactured in Japan between 1977 and 1982 by Nippon Kogaku K. K. (now Nikon Corporation ).