30
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30
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This is a Contessa 35 (model 533/24), a compact folding 35mm rangefinder camera made in Stuttgart, Germany by Zeiss-Ikon between the years 1950 and 1955. The Contessa was designed as a premiere fixed lens compact folding camera that had the features and quality of the best of what Germany could offer at the time. The unique rangefinder system used a rotating piece of glass that needed no physical connection to the main body of the camera meaning it could be folded shut without any risk of damage. The camera was very well built and very expensive, however this likely kept sales low as the camera was only in production for 5 years. Film Type: 135 (35mm) Lens: 45mm f/2.8 Zeiss-Opton Tessar coated 4-elements Focus: 0.8 meters to Infinity Viewfinder: Coincident Image Coupled Rangefinder Shutter: Compur-Rapid Leaf Speeds: B, 1 – 1/500 seconds Exposure Meter: Uncoupled Selenium Cell w/ top plate readout Battery: None Flash Mount: Coldshoe with X Flash Sync Port Weight: 605 grams Manual: History The Carl Zeiss Foundation has a long and rich history that dates back to the 1800s which I’ve covered in other reviews for cameras like the.
Zeiss Ikon Tenax I Zeiss Ikon Tenax I This camera is unlike my other Zeiss Ikon cameras in that it was aimed at the middle of the amateur market - above the box Brownie brigade but below the Contaflex, Ikoflex, Ikonta market.
If you’d like to know more, I suggest reading the history sections in those articles. For this article, I’ll start at the end of World War II when Zeiss-Ikon Dresden was split into separate Zeiss-Ikon companies, one based in Stuttgart, West Germany, and the other in Dresden, East Germany.
Hope this helps. Replacement of either part is the only option, there are no safe alternatives to repair them. Kenmore electric range parts manual. BTW, you can go here for parts.
An agreement between the Allied controlled West German government and Soviet controlled East German government allowed both companies to use the Zeiss-Ikon name, but trademark disputes were common throughout the entire brand. For a short while after the war, the West German company was named Zeiss-Opton Optische Werke Oberkochen GmbH, but soon changed back to Zeiss-Ikon after relocating to Stuttgart. In the late 1940s, Germany was still heavily battered from the war, and the rest of the world did not see Germany as a respected economic power, but any reservations the rest of the world had towards German produced items seemingly did not apply to German cameras and other optical goods. German cameras were highly prized souvenirs by Allied soldiers during the war, and afterwards the demand for quality built German cameras was very high. An artist’s drawing of the Zeiss Contessa factory in Stuttgart. The buildings with the peaked roofs are part of the original factory, and the flat roof buildings were constructed in the 1950s.
The Contessa-Nettel factory in Stuttgart, which Zeiss acquired in it’s 1926 merger, was largely spared damage from the war and was the only one of Zeiss’s major facilities that would not fall under control from the Soviet government, so it was chosen as the logical site for a West German Zeiss resurgence. The Contessa factory was the smallest of the 4 major Zeiss-Ikon factories in pre-war Germany and had the least number of employees. In the first few years after the war, 100% of the production from the Stuttgart factory was handed over to the American military and were sold via the military’s PX retail stores.
In my research for this article, I came across. Due to the small size of the Stuttgart factory, Zeiss struggled to keep up with demand. Ableton 9 5 keygen. It wasn’t until around 1951 when a couple of new buildings were built next to the original factory to increase production. Prior to the war, most of Zeiss-Ikon’s design work was done at the Dresden factory and it was there where the majority of new cameras were created. The Stuttgart factory produced most of Zeiss’s compact roll film cameras like the Ikonta and Nettar series, so those were the first models to resume production. This German language ad for the Zeiss-Ikon Tenax shows Hubert Nerwin in lederhosen. Shortly after resuming production of these models, Zeiss-Ikon sought to revive the reputation of the Zeiss brand by releasing a series of compact new 35mm cameras designed by famed designer Hubert Nerwin.
This is a Contessa 35 (model 533/24), a compact folding 35mm rangefinder camera made in Stuttgart, Germany by Zeiss-Ikon between the years 1950 and 1955. The Contessa was designed as a premiere fixed lens compact folding camera that had the features and quality of the best of what Germany could offer at the time. The unique rangefinder system used a rotating piece of glass that needed no physical connection to the main body of the camera meaning it could be folded shut without any risk of damage. The camera was very well built and very expensive, however this likely kept sales low as the camera was only in production for 5 years. Film Type: 135 (35mm) Lens: 45mm f/2.8 Zeiss-Opton Tessar coated 4-elements Focus: 0.8 meters to Infinity Viewfinder: Coincident Image Coupled Rangefinder Shutter: Compur-Rapid Leaf Speeds: B, 1 – 1/500 seconds Exposure Meter: Uncoupled Selenium Cell w/ top plate readout Battery: None Flash Mount: Coldshoe with X Flash Sync Port Weight: 605 grams Manual: History The Carl Zeiss Foundation has a long and rich history that dates back to the 1800s which I’ve covered in other reviews for cameras like the.
Zeiss Ikon Tenax I Zeiss Ikon Tenax I This camera is unlike my other Zeiss Ikon cameras in that it was aimed at the middle of the amateur market - above the box Brownie brigade but below the Contaflex, Ikoflex, Ikonta market.
If you’d like to know more, I suggest reading the history sections in those articles. For this article, I’ll start at the end of World War II when Zeiss-Ikon Dresden was split into separate Zeiss-Ikon companies, one based in Stuttgart, West Germany, and the other in Dresden, East Germany.
Hope this helps. Replacement of either part is the only option, there are no safe alternatives to repair them. Kenmore electric range parts manual. BTW, you can go here for parts.
An agreement between the Allied controlled West German government and Soviet controlled East German government allowed both companies to use the Zeiss-Ikon name, but trademark disputes were common throughout the entire brand. For a short while after the war, the West German company was named Zeiss-Opton Optische Werke Oberkochen GmbH, but soon changed back to Zeiss-Ikon after relocating to Stuttgart. In the late 1940s, Germany was still heavily battered from the war, and the rest of the world did not see Germany as a respected economic power, but any reservations the rest of the world had towards German produced items seemingly did not apply to German cameras and other optical goods. German cameras were highly prized souvenirs by Allied soldiers during the war, and afterwards the demand for quality built German cameras was very high. An artist’s drawing of the Zeiss Contessa factory in Stuttgart. The buildings with the peaked roofs are part of the original factory, and the flat roof buildings were constructed in the 1950s.
The Contessa-Nettel factory in Stuttgart, which Zeiss acquired in it’s 1926 merger, was largely spared damage from the war and was the only one of Zeiss’s major facilities that would not fall under control from the Soviet government, so it was chosen as the logical site for a West German Zeiss resurgence. The Contessa factory was the smallest of the 4 major Zeiss-Ikon factories in pre-war Germany and had the least number of employees. In the first few years after the war, 100% of the production from the Stuttgart factory was handed over to the American military and were sold via the military’s PX retail stores.
In my research for this article, I came across. Due to the small size of the Stuttgart factory, Zeiss struggled to keep up with demand. Ableton 9 5 keygen. It wasn’t until around 1951 when a couple of new buildings were built next to the original factory to increase production. Prior to the war, most of Zeiss-Ikon’s design work was done at the Dresden factory and it was there where the majority of new cameras were created. The Stuttgart factory produced most of Zeiss’s compact roll film cameras like the Ikonta and Nettar series, so those were the first models to resume production. This German language ad for the Zeiss-Ikon Tenax shows Hubert Nerwin in lederhosen. Shortly after resuming production of these models, Zeiss-Ikon sought to revive the reputation of the Zeiss brand by releasing a series of compact new 35mm cameras designed by famed designer Hubert Nerwin.
...'>Zeiss Ikon Tenax Manual(30.11.2018)This is a Contessa 35 (model 533/24), a compact folding 35mm rangefinder camera made in Stuttgart, Germany by Zeiss-Ikon between the years 1950 and 1955. The Contessa was designed as a premiere fixed lens compact folding camera that had the features and quality of the best of what Germany could offer at the time. The unique rangefinder system used a rotating piece of glass that needed no physical connection to the main body of the camera meaning it could be folded shut without any risk of damage. The camera was very well built and very expensive, however this likely kept sales low as the camera was only in production for 5 years. Film Type: 135 (35mm) Lens: 45mm f/2.8 Zeiss-Opton Tessar coated 4-elements Focus: 0.8 meters to Infinity Viewfinder: Coincident Image Coupled Rangefinder Shutter: Compur-Rapid Leaf Speeds: B, 1 – 1/500 seconds Exposure Meter: Uncoupled Selenium Cell w/ top plate readout Battery: None Flash Mount: Coldshoe with X Flash Sync Port Weight: 605 grams Manual: History The Carl Zeiss Foundation has a long and rich history that dates back to the 1800s which I’ve covered in other reviews for cameras like the.
Zeiss Ikon Tenax I Zeiss Ikon Tenax I This camera is unlike my other Zeiss Ikon cameras in that it was aimed at the middle of the amateur market - above the box Brownie brigade but below the Contaflex, Ikoflex, Ikonta market.
If you’d like to know more, I suggest reading the history sections in those articles. For this article, I’ll start at the end of World War II when Zeiss-Ikon Dresden was split into separate Zeiss-Ikon companies, one based in Stuttgart, West Germany, and the other in Dresden, East Germany.
Hope this helps. Replacement of either part is the only option, there are no safe alternatives to repair them. Kenmore electric range parts manual. BTW, you can go here for parts.
An agreement between the Allied controlled West German government and Soviet controlled East German government allowed both companies to use the Zeiss-Ikon name, but trademark disputes were common throughout the entire brand. For a short while after the war, the West German company was named Zeiss-Opton Optische Werke Oberkochen GmbH, but soon changed back to Zeiss-Ikon after relocating to Stuttgart. In the late 1940s, Germany was still heavily battered from the war, and the rest of the world did not see Germany as a respected economic power, but any reservations the rest of the world had towards German produced items seemingly did not apply to German cameras and other optical goods. German cameras were highly prized souvenirs by Allied soldiers during the war, and afterwards the demand for quality built German cameras was very high. An artist’s drawing of the Zeiss Contessa factory in Stuttgart. The buildings with the peaked roofs are part of the original factory, and the flat roof buildings were constructed in the 1950s.
The Contessa-Nettel factory in Stuttgart, which Zeiss acquired in it’s 1926 merger, was largely spared damage from the war and was the only one of Zeiss’s major facilities that would not fall under control from the Soviet government, so it was chosen as the logical site for a West German Zeiss resurgence. The Contessa factory was the smallest of the 4 major Zeiss-Ikon factories in pre-war Germany and had the least number of employees. In the first few years after the war, 100% of the production from the Stuttgart factory was handed over to the American military and were sold via the military’s PX retail stores.
In my research for this article, I came across. Due to the small size of the Stuttgart factory, Zeiss struggled to keep up with demand. Ableton 9 5 keygen. It wasn’t until around 1951 when a couple of new buildings were built next to the original factory to increase production. Prior to the war, most of Zeiss-Ikon’s design work was done at the Dresden factory and it was there where the majority of new cameras were created. The Stuttgart factory produced most of Zeiss’s compact roll film cameras like the Ikonta and Nettar series, so those were the first models to resume production. This German language ad for the Zeiss-Ikon Tenax shows Hubert Nerwin in lederhosen. Shortly after resuming production of these models, Zeiss-Ikon sought to revive the reputation of the Zeiss brand by releasing a series of compact new 35mm cameras designed by famed designer Hubert Nerwin.
...'>Zeiss Ikon Tenax Manual(30.11.2018)