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  2. Tenax II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenax_II

    The "Tenax" name belonged to the C. P. Goerz company in Berlin, being used from 1907 on folding plate cameras and a Vest-pocket camera from 1909. C. P. Goerz became a part of Zeiss Ikon at its formation in 1926. The name was used again by ZI in the 1960s. The Tenax I was continued for a while in the 1950s in East Germany. [3]

  3. Tenax I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenax_I

    The Tenax I is a 24x24 mm fixed lens camera by Zeiss Ikon launched in 1939.. The Tenax I was actually launched after the Tenax II.Like the Tenax II, it is a 24×24mm square-format camera taking over 50 exposures on a standard 135 film (35 mm), with a rapid-advance lever next to the lens.

  4. Friedrich Deckel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Deckel

    Zeiss Ikon folding camera equipped with a Tessar lens and a Deckel Compur rim-set shutter. Note the stylized "FD" branding on the right side of the shutter. Friedrich Deckel GmbH, also known as F.Deckel, was a German company founded by Friedrich Deckel and Christian Bruns in Munich as Bruns & Deckel in 1903.

  5. Goerz (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goerz_(company)

    From 1888 it made cameras and photographic lenses. During the First World War, Goerz's main production was for the German and Austrian military. Goerz is known primarily for Anschütz strut-folding cameras, Dagor and Tengor lenses, Tenax cameras (later continued by Zeiss Ikon) and Minicord subminiature cameras. C.

  6. Voigtländer Vito - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voigtländer_Vito

    In the 1970s, Rollei acquired the Voigtländer brand from Zeiss and released several compact rangefinder cameras under the VF series, some of which also were sold as Rollei-branded cameras. The first model in the VF series was the VF 101 (1974), a close copy of the Zeiss Ikon/Contessa S 312 (1971), one of the last cameras that had been ...

  7. Voigtländer Vitessa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voigtländer_Vitessa

    The Zeiss Ikon/Voigtländer (ZIV) Vitessa 500 and Vitessa 1000 revived the Vitessa name in 1966 for a series of fixed-lens compact cameras using 135 film. The 500S, 500L, and 500AE were equipped with a 42 mm f /2.8 Color-Lanthar triplet lens, while the 500SE and 1000SR were equipped with a 40 mm f /2.8 Tessar lens. [8]

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