Wirgin Edixa-Flex - Popular West German SLR camera with prisma viewfinder and Edixa Auto Casseron 1:2.8 50mm (M42 screw mount) lens, clad with red leather. C. 1963.
seen from China
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seen from Belarus
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Wirgin Edixa-Flex - Popular West German SLR camera with prisma viewfinder and Edixa Auto Casseron 1:2.8 50mm (M42 screw mount) lens, clad with red leather. C. 1963.
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Edixa-Flex SLR camera with Auto-Casseron 1:2.8 f+50mm lens
Edixa Reflex B camera body. With pentaprism, viewfinder removed, top-viewfinder closed, top-viewfinder opened wit loupe.
Nagel-Kodak Pupille
Just after I finished last week's blog on the Ricoh Auto Half cameras, I was looking around the cameras on my shelf in my office, thinking which camera I'd write about this week. Nothing stood out to me, so I figured I'd let it rest for a day or two and think about it.
Going to bed that evening, a camera popped into my head out of the blue. Having a thought or remembering something from earlier in the day is something that often happens to me, generally just as I lie down to go to sleep, something pops into my head, and that's just what happened.
The thought that came into my head was that I remembered having a nice condition Nagel Pupille camera in a box a few months back, which I store with some of my better cameras. That's the camera I wanted to write about for this week's blog post.
After I woke up, had my morning coffee, I settled into my office and opened the box of cameras to look for the Pupille camera I had. Right on top of other cameras was the case. I pulled out the case, and inside was the Pupille camera. Looking at the camera a bit closer, I say this was the Kodak version of the Pupille, which was introduced a year or so after its release.
It was just as I remembered it. The camera was in excellent condition with the lens cap. The first thing I did was test the shutter, and most of the speeds seemed accurate to my ear. Some of the slower speeds were not closing, which is somewhat accurate for a shutter almost 100 years old. The upper speeds were working fine, so I figured I'd put a roll of 127 film into the camera and take it to the county fair my wife. I were planning on going to over the weekend.
I recall purchasing the camera approximately 15 years ago at an auction I bid on. At the time, it was a lovely addition to my collection, especially since it came with the lens cap and a nice, fitted case for the camera.
The Nagel-Kodak Pupille was a camera I had intended to write about a few years ago when I started my blog posts, but then forgot about it for a while. When it popped into my head last week, I'm thrilled it did.
History:
Dr. August Nagel (1882–1943) was a pioneering German camera designer and manufacturer whose innovations profoundly shaped photographic technology in the early 20th century. Born in Pfrondorf, Germany, Nagel displayed an early interest in camera construction. In 1908, at the age of 26, he co-founded his first company, Drexler & Nagel, in Stuttgart. This company quickly evolved into Contessa-Camerawerke, and by 1910, it had produced a broad range of camera models, which were distributed globally. Nagel's innovations during World War I included specialized aerial and balloon cameras, and his achievements earned him an honorary doctorate from the University of Freiburg in 1918.
Seeking further growth, Nagel's company merged with Nettel Kamera-werke in 1919, becoming Contessa-Nettel, which became one of Germany's most significant camera producers. In 1926, in response to market pressures and Zeiss Stiftung's interest, Contessa-Nettel was merged with other major German camera makers to form Zeiss Ikon, with Nagel as director of manufacturing. However, management frustrations and a loss of control led him to leave Zeiss Ikon in 1928, after which he established his factory, Dr. August Nagel Werke, in Stuttgart.
Nagel Werke quickly gained a reputation for producing affordable, high-quality folding plate and roll film cameras, notably the Vollenda models, introduced in 1929, and the more expensive Pupille, introduced in 1930. This success attracted Eastman Kodak, which sought to compete in the European precision camera market. In 1931, Kodak acquired Nagel Werke, making Dr. Nagel the general manager of the rebranded Kodak AG.
With Kodak's backing, Nagel devised the Retina 35mm camera and, critically, introduced the Kodak 135 film cartridge in 1934—a pre-rolled 35mm film format compatible with both Leica and Contax cameras. This cartridge would become the global industry standard for 35mm photography, marking Nagel's most enduring legacy.
Under Nagel's leadership, Kodak AG's Stuttgart plant became known for its Retina cameras and innovations throughout the 1930s. Almost two million cameras were produced before World War II. Dr. August Nagel died in 1943, but his influence continued; camera production resumed post-war and flourished into the 1960s under his son, Helmut Nagel. Dr. Nagel's career typifies the innovative spirit of early photographic engineering and established many of the standards still recognized in the industry today.
My Camera:
My Kodak Pupille camera is a tiny, compact camera that measures 4" wide, by 2.5" tall with the viewfinder retracted and 3.5" with the viewfinder opened. The camera is 2" deep with the lens retracted and 2.75" deep when the lens is in the regular taking position. The camera weighs 14.5 ounces when empty, excluding film.
The camera captures a 3x4cm image on 127mm film. My Pupille camera has a Jos. Schneider & Co. Xenon 4.5 cm f/2.0 lens. The camera also had the option of Leitz Elmar 5cm F/3.5, a Schneider Xenon 5cm F/3.5, or a Cook Anastigmat 2" F/3.5 lens, all in a Fr. Deckel Compur shutter.
On top of the camera, there is an optical finder that pops up, displaying a vertical image. If you want to photograph a horizontal subject, you'll need to turn the camera 90 degrees to photograph in landscape mode. Looking from left to right at the top of the camera, there is the film winding knob, the optical pop-up viewfinder, a removable accessory shoe for a separate rangefinder, and under the accessory shoe, the depth of field scale.
To take a photograph, you first need to slide the lens into the "taking" position. This is done by sliding the lever, located under the lens, to the left when facing the camera. Moving the bar slides the lens out from the camera body. The lens is mounted on a beautifully constructed helicoid, which becomes visible once the lever is moved and the lens is in the "taking" position. Around the shutter is a large black ring that focuses the lens. The focus range on the lens goes from approximately 30" or 2.5' to infinity. The numbers on the focusing ring are big and easy to read, and the focusing on this camera is smooth.
When you look at the back of this camera and many other cameras that take 127 size film, you'll notice the camera has two red windows on the back. This will become relevant once you read the loading and winding procedure for this style of camera, which will be explained over the following few paragraphs.
To load film into the camera, first you need to unlock the body of the camera from the film chamber. You do this on the bottom of the camera by sliding the lever to the "O" position. You'll see a small line on the tripod socket that aligns the "C" (closed) setting with the "O" (open) setting. Once you have the film chamber unlocked, the top portion of the camera slides out of the camera body, exposing the area where the film is loaded into the camera.
Take the empty spool from the right side by sliding the spool down. The holding mechanism is on a spring, and the spool will come out. Place the empty spool on the left side and ensure it's engaged in the take-up winding knob. Place the fresh roll of film on the right side and tear the tape so that you can bring the film leader over to the take-up spool, ensuring it is positioned over the rollers on either side of the opening where the film is exposed. Insert the film tab into the slot on the take-up spool and wind the winding knob until the word "start" appears on the paper backing. Once you see the word "start", slide the film chamber back into the camera body, ensuring it's fully inserted. Then, slide the lever at the bottom from "O" to "C" for closed.
Now, look at the back of the camera and start winding the film winding knob in a clockwise direction until you see arrows in the window. This is the indication that you're approaching your first frame, so you should start to slow down on winding the camera. Stop winding when you see the number 1 in the right side window. This is the indication you're at your first image. Once you've taken the first frame, wind the film advance lever until you see the number 1 in the window on the left, and stop. This is the indication you're at your second image. Once that frame is taken, then wind until you see the number 2 in the right window. You follow these steps until you see the number 8 on the left side window, which means you've taken sixteen images on the roll of film. This operation is standard for 127 size film, which takes 3x4cm size negatives on a camera with two windows on the back.
The standard operating sequence when using this camera is to have the separate rangefinder, which is slid onto the accessory shoe when the camera is in use.
Meter for your subject with a separate light meter.
Look through the rangefinder and focus on your subject.
Find the distance to your subject and focus the lens to that distance on the camera.
Set the shutter speed and aperture setting on the lens. Shutter speed is located at the top, and aperture is positioned under the lens.
Cock the shutter lever on top of the lens at the 11 o'clock position.
Trip the shutter, which is below at the 7 o'clock position on the lens.
Retracting the lens back into the camera body is a little tricky and something I had to figure out, as I had done it wrong once. The first thing you need to do is focus the lens to infinity. Then, slide the bar at the bottom of the camera from left to right, and the lens retracts into the camera's body. If you don't focus the lens to infinity, the bar won't fit into a small cutout on the focusing ring. The bar will protrude from the bottom of the camera, rather than being tucked away neatly as it should be. Once the bar is back in the camera, you can remove the rangefinder, put the lens cap on, and tuck the camera away in its case, if you have one.
Something I've seen for the camera is an accessory reflex finder, which was made by Kodak, that turned the Pupille into a TLR camera.
Results:
My wife and I attended our local county fair, where I loaded a roll of 400-speed 127 film into the Pupille and brought it with me to take some photos. I don't have the rangefinder for the camera, so all of the focusing I did was purely by guesstimation.
Bringing my trusty Sekonic L-308 meter for accurate exposures, we walked around the fair looking for nice images to take.
Once I got home, I processed the film, and here are some of the results taken at the fair. I generally only do light spotting on the images, so please excuse the excess dust on them.
Conclusion:
One of the first things I noticed when using the Pupille was how sturdy the camera felt. It's small and compact, fitting into my pocket, especially when the lens is retracted.
The camera was easy to use, and the shutter worked well. There were a few frames when I didn't focus properly, but for the most part, the camera did a good job, and it was great fun to shoot with.
Thank you for taking a few minutes to read about this almost 100-year-old camera that still works fabulously.
Here's a link to some of the other camera reviews.
Visit Cuny's Camera and Photo for some of the items seen on my blog, along with other interesting photo items I have for sale.
Until next week, please be safe.
Finetta 88 Camera
The Finetta 88 camera caught my eye on a visit to London a year or so ago when I had about an hour during a walk down Portabello Road. I met with Juliano, the owner of Cameras London, who was still in the process of setting up. As I was looking over his extensive items on the multiple tables he has, I saw the grey body of the Finetta 88 camera.
If you are a camera enthusiast and can go to Portabello Road during the weekends, I highly recommend seeing Juliano. He has an incredible selection of older wood cameras with brass lenses and many of the more common 35mm point-and-shoot cameras that seem to be all the rage now.
As I've mentioned a few times, I'm always drawn to the camera with either a different color or if there is something odd or unusual about the item. Not only is the Finetta that I saw covered in a gray covering on the camera, but the lens is somewhat off-center, giving the camera an "out of the ordinary" look. I put the Finetta 88 camera aside and looked over many other cameras I wanted to purchase. As we discussed the price, I picked up the Finetta again and added it to the few items I purchased that day, and I'm glad I did.
The Company
Finetta-Werk was a German camera manufacturer with roots tracing back to Kamerawerk Peter Saraber, a company founded by Peter Saraber in 1945 in Goslar, Germany. Saraber, a Dutch engineer, initially focused on producing precision optical equipment in the post-war era during heightened demand for affordable and efficient photographic devices. Saraber teamed up with a Voigtlander engineer, Helmet Finke, around 1947 to design and develop a new camera.
"Finetta" was introduced in the late 1940s, marking the company's transition toward a more consumer-friendly image. The Finetta cameras, characterized by their simplicity, durability, and relatively low cost, appealed to post-war Europe's growing middle class. Early models, such as the Finetta 88, showcased Saraber's dedication to compactness and practicality, featuring a straightforward mechanism for capturing 35mm images, including a new two-leaf shutter system, which they applied for a patent. They also invented a new film advance system with double exposure prevention.
By the 1950s, the company rebranded as Finetta-Werk and expanded its product lineup. The Finetta 99 was notable for its interchangeable lenses, which had a new three-prong lens mount and included a series of four different lenses. The lenses included a Colorfinar 70mm f/5.3, a Telec 90mm f/4.5, a wide-angle 35mm Berthiot lens, and the normal Finetar 45mm f2.8 lens. Along with the lenses, Finetta improved design quality, reflecting a shift toward competing with established brands like Kodak and Agfa.
Another interesting fact is that in 1954, Finetta started working with Jacques Bolesy of the Bolsey camera company to help with the design and production of their small, compact Bolsey 8 subminiature still and movie camera. Unfortunately, Finetta went out of business soon after and closed their factory in 1957.
Finetta cameras were often praised for their ergonomic designs and mechanical reliability, offering a stepping stone for amateur photographers transitioning into more serious photographic endeavors.
My Camera:
My Finetta 88 camera is covered in an odd fabric. It has a herringbone-style pattern and is not the normal leather or leatherette covered in most cameras. It is more of a fabric material, but it does have a great feel to it, and I like the greyish color, which gives the camera an elegant appearance.
The Finetta is 3" tall by 5 1/8" wide by 2.5" deep from the front of the lens to the back of the camera, and weighs 1lb, and .7 ozs, and comes with a Finetar 45mm f2.8 lens which has a three-prong bayonet. There is no locking mechanism on the lens mount, so you must be careful when focusing on the camera. If you turn the lens too far, the mount will start to move, and the lens will pop off, which is pretty small. The lens does "click" into place, but it can somewhat easily come off without the locking pin.
My lens focuses from 2.8 feet to infinity. It may focus closer as the lens rotates past the 2.8-foot mark on the lens. The aperture settings are on the inside of the focus ring. The camera doesn't have an internal focus system, so all the focus is guesswork, judging the distance, and setting focus. The aperture range is from f2.8 to f16 and is indicated by a small notch on the setting ring.
With the lens removed, you can easily see the two-leaf shutter system. The camera only has a few different shutter speeds, ranging from 1/250, 1/100, 1/50, 1/25, and "B" for timed exposures. The shutter speeds are set on a very small and challenging knob next to the lens.
One thing I noticed about the camera when I first picked it up and started to play with it was that things seemed backward from what I am used to. I'm used to filming advanced turning in a clockwise movement, but this camera goes counterclockwise. It's the same as taking the back off the camera to load the film. To open the back, you turn the knob on the bottom in a clockwise motion. The back is held onto the camera with none other than a bolt-style fastener which is held onto the camera with a larger circular nut that screws on to keep the back onto the camera body. To me, that is the motion to tighten, but on this camera, it's the motion to untighten and remove the back to load the film.
When I removed the back from the camera, I noticed a couple of things right away. My Finetta 88 had a film cassette in the camera. I'm not 100% sure who makes this cassette. Still, it's very similar to the Leica cassettes in design, with two outer compartments and an inner spool. The cassette is also held into the camera with a locking lever that slides over the end of the cassette to keep it in place. The second item I noticed was a bright and shiny pressure plate over the shutter area to keep the film flat as it's transported across the chamber. The pressure plate needs to be lifted when loading the 35mm film. The third item noticed was a larger, thicker take-up spool on the camera's right side. This one is similar to what I wrote about with the Corfield Periflex camera. There is a slot to put the 35mm leader into, which is needed to load the camera.
A built-in, double exposure prevention system is within the camera's transport. Once you trip the shutter, under the take-up spool is a small piece of metal that pushes out and stays out until you wind the camera, which cocks the shutter and flattens that piece of metal, allowing you to take the next photo. I guess there's a pin that pushes out the metal piece, and when the film is advanced, it will enable the pin to fall back into place for the next photo.
On top of the camera is nothing more than the film advance knob on the right side, which turns counterclockwise to advance to the next frame. The frame counter, accessory/flash shoe, and rewind knob are on the far left.
My Results:
The camera is very straightforward and somewhat basic in its operations. I didn't use the 35mm cassette that came with the camera; I just used a regular 35mm roll of film. I put in a roll of T-Max 125 film and walked through the neighborhood to see what kind of results the camera could produce. After I got back from my walk through the neighborhood, I processed the film, and here are a few of the shots I took.
My Conclusion:
The Finetta 88 camera took a bit to get used to. I kept on trying to turn the advance knob in the wrong direction; the shutter speed dial was small and difficult to turn. That may be more of a camera cleaning issue, but I changed to other speeds. The lens did start to unmount a couple of times, but nothing disastrous to the point where the lens fell off the camera. The focus is smooth on my camera; it was more operator malfunction than anything, but overall, the camera was enjoyable to shoot with, and I think the lens I have on this camera is sharp.
I'll definitely want to shoot with this camera in the future. It was fun and a pleasant experience overall.
Thank you for taking a few minutes from your day to learn about this interesting mid-century camera I have in my collection.
Until next week, please be safe.
Bussox-Sport Luxe Camera
he Bussox-Sport Luxe camera is another beautiful camera purchased at the Paris flea market when my wife and I traveled there this past summer. While visiting one of the hundreds of stalls within many buildings comprising the Paris flea market, I found a wonderful gentleman with a case of cameras and other photographic items for sale.
As I mentioned in many of my previous blog posts, I love cameras that are colorful or unusual. Maybe they are toy cameras shaped like a soccer ball or a cartoon character. I own many colored box and folding cameras that are different from ordinary black box or folding cameras. That's what drew me to this wonderful, small, and odd camera.
Within the stall, there was a case containing a group of glass negatives, the Zeiss Super Nettel that I previously wrote about, and this lovely exotic brown camera, which looked very familiar but had a name that I wasn't familiar with. I purchased all the items and went on my way to find other treasures.
When I returned to the hotel, I took the brown bakelite camera from its case and did some more research. I found out the camera is called Bussox-Sport Luxe, made by Ruberg & Renner and explicitly exported to France from their factory in Germany. Also, looking at the back of the camera, it appeared to have a roll of film still in the camera, and the number on the frame was four, so with any luck, I could process the film and find other photos that might interest me.
The Company:
A few years ago, I wrote a blog post on a different Ruberg & Renner camera, and at that time, there needed to be more information regarding the company. In that post, I wrote: The Ruberg cameras were manufactured by the Ruberg & Renner company, located in the Delstern district of Hagen, Germany, during the 1930s. The company was started in 1918 by Josef Ruberg, who originally started producing drive trains for bicycles, motorcycles, and automobiles. After 1930, the company began making simple cameras. In 1931, Josef obtained a patent for constructing a simple camera in Germany. He also received a patent in the United States in February 1932.
The patent application states that the simple and very inexpensive production of all the camera parts from synthetic resin, which was done from a single pressing process, "makes it possible to place a cheap camera on the market that is affordable to all. " In the 1930s, Ruberg & Renner manufactured four models with 25 designs for export to the USA, Great Britain, and France. The cameras' construction ended in the mid-1930s when the company started producing products to help the German war effort.
After doing some digging, I came up with the following: Along with cameras, chains remained the company's main business. From 1935 onwards, the series production of ammunition belts marked the end of camera production in Hagen, which shortly afterward followed.
Josef Ruberg had designed new metal cartridge belts for machine guns in 1917. The Treaty of Versailles banned the production of automatic weapons and accessories from 1919 to 1935. In February 1936, Ruberg & Renner applied for a patent for a metal cartridge belt for the MG 17 (caliber 7.92x57 mm). These specialized units are equipped with ammunition for machine guns and military equipment in the military air force. The sons also worked in the company. Felix (1909-1994) was born in 1937 in Delstern. It manufactured on-board gun carriages until the beginning of 1945. In 1941, his son Werner (1912-2005) took over the management of the Ruberg & Renner chain works.
Ruberg & Renner continued producing drive and transport chains in 1947. The Felix Ruberg metal goods factory manufactured household appliances. From the early 1950s, Ruberg & Renner promoted cycling and motorcycle sports. Roller chains were used in particular here. Until 1967, the company, like the Schweinfurt Torpedo Works and Fichtel & Sachs, had its racing teams in the Federal Republic. In the following years, the firm of the US-American company Rexnord was taken over. Rexnord Kette GmbH relocated its production from Delstern to its current location in the Lennetal near Fley in 1982. Much of the historical information comes from the Westfalen Museum.
My Camera:
My Bussox-Sport Luxe camera is 3" tall, including the winding knobs, by 3 5/8" wide, by 1 5/8" deep with the lens retracted and 2.5" deep with the lens away from the body and focused to the closest focus distance, which is 1 meter. The camera weighs 6.1 oz, which is very small and compact, and takes 127 rolls of film, producing 1.25" by 1 5/8" sized negatives. On my camera, it's etched by the previous owner 4x6 1/2 in many different places.
To open the camera to load the film, a chrome button is on the left side of the camera if you're holding it to take a photo. Press the chrome button, moving a brass grip from holding the door closed on the camera. There are a couple of "thumb grips" on both the back door's top and bottom, which you hold onto to open the back. The back door doesn't come off the camera as it's hinged, and the door swings to the right to open.
On many cameras, to load the film into the camera, you pull up the tabs that hold the spool into place, which I tried, but the knobs didn't move. You need to turn the knobs which make you think you're unthreading them. By doing so, the knobs move away from the body of the camera, and you can load a roll of film or move the empty spool into the take-up position. The fresh roll of film goes into the camera's right side and you pull the leader to the left side where the take up spool is. This is backward to many cameras, or the many that I use, as the take-up spool is generally on the camera's right side.
Now that the film is loaded into the camera, it's time to take photos. The camera has a straightforward meniscus lens. There is a knurled collar around the lens that you need to turn in a clockwise motion to extend before taking a photo. The lens barrel is on a helicoid, which extends the lens when the knurled ring turns, much like on a bolt.
For the shutter, two settings are located in the upper right of the lens and include settings "I" for instant or turn the wheel to "T" for time. Below the lens are the aperture settings. On this camera, since it's for the French market, there is Grand for the widest setting and Petit for a smaller aperture setting. One of the settings is Ferme, which means firm. When the aperture is set at Ferme, it does not open over the lens or block all light from reaching the film.
Since there is no lock for the shutter, the shutter release in the 7 o'clock position on the lens can fire at any time when pressed. Whether the lens is out or in, the shutter will fire. This setting is similar to a lens cap, and by putting it in position, if the shutter fires, no frame will be exposed to light or wasting film. The photographer would need to consciously set the camera into and out of this setting every time they put it into the case or pocket, then change it when taking a photo.
To retract the lens to put it back into the camera case, you turn the knurled ring counterclockwise, and the lens retracts into the camera body. I can now understand the "Ferme" setting, as many of the negatives on the roll in the camera when purchased were exposed with the lens in the retracted position, as you can see in the results area on the post.
The results:
As mentioned, the camera had a roll of 127 Agfa film, so I walked in front of my house and took photos of a planter box and some trees in our neighborhood. There were only about four photos left. After taking the photos, I went home and processed the film. It didn't surprise me, but the images within the camera didn't turn out, and the ones I did around our hose turned out barely and were extremely thin in the exposure on the negatives.
Here are the results from the film in the camera. As I mentioned earlier, I did note that it's easy to take a photo when the lens is retracted, making the image size smaller on the negative, which you can see on the negatives.
My Conclusion:
The shutter on my camera doesn't always work, so while I'd like to put a fresh roll in it and try it again, I don't think the shutter can take it as it's barely opening and closing as it is. I'll get brave and see if I can take the front off and fix it, but it's resting along with many other cameras in my collection. I love the color and the helicoid lens system.
Thank you for taking a few minutes to look over this week's blog post. I'd love to hear from you, so let me know your thoughts and if you have any of the Ruberg & Renner cameras in your collection.
Until next week, please be safe.
Nova Subminiature Camera
My camera collection is very eclectic, and I am drawn to odd and unusual cameras and photo items. I did a blog posting on the Minolta Six camera a couple of weeks ago. What drew me to that particular camera was that it didn't have the standard cloth bellows system but rather a series of metal cubes that pulled out and retracted back into the camera to form the bellows. These were very similar to a camping cup, where the larger rings pull away from the smaller ones on the bottom, creating a cone-shaped cup.
A year or so ago, there was a pretty major auction of cameras in the United States, with hundreds, if not thousands, of cameras and other photo items sold. There were many "lots" that had several cameras, maybe as many as 25-30 grouped into similar lots. I won one of these "lots" that had several smaller and subminiature cameras, many in their cases and several in the original box. The Nova Subminiature camera was in that particular lot.
I can still remember unwrapping the camera and opening the case to a camera I had seen in McKeown's Camera price guides many times. When I pulled the bellows out to find that they had a cubed bellows system, I immediately put the camera on my display shelf because I was drawn to its look.
The Company:
Here's where it gets odd. The only thing I can find about this camera or who made it was that it was created by Erwin Adloff Apparatebau, Berlin-Wilmersdorf, in 1938. Even that is suspect, according to McKeown's guide, as they have the Nova listed separately. There is a camera called the Adloff Tex camera, which has a body similar to the telescoping box bellows but with a more elaborate shutter.
Another oddity about this camera was that it was designed by Fritz Kaftanski, who was born in Essen, Germany, in 1899. According to the information found online, Kaftanski started designing Fotofex Kameras in Berlin in 1927. In 1932, Fotofex showed the Visorflex camera at the Leipzig fair and introduced other cameras a few months later.
In 1934, the Sida and Extra Sida were tiny cameras produced in Germany, then later in Poland and Czechoslovakia under license in Italy. In 1937, Kaftanski moved to Czechoslovakia with the Sida patent, where production continued. Then, according to all I can find, Kaftanski moved to Paris in 1939, so sometime before moving to Czechoslovakia, he either designed the Nova for Erwin Adloff or someone else who remains unknown designed the camera.
Since little is written about this company, my best guess is that Erwin Adloff Apparatebau, Berlin-Wilmersdorf, was a small manufacturer producing one or two cameras just before World War II broke out. Many records either went missing or were possibly destroyed during the war. Fritz Kaftanski designed the Nova sometime before 1938, when it was produced. However, from what I can find online, I don't see any definitive proof or acknowledgment of Kaftanski designing the Nova, although he did create many other cameras during this timeframe.
My Camera:
My camera is pretty small, measuring 3 5/8" wide by 2" tall by 1.5" deep with the lens retracted and 2 5/8" deep with the lens extended. The camera without the case weighs 7.1 oz, and with the case 9.9 oz. It uses paper-backed unperforated 35mm film, known as Bolta film, which was very popular during this timeframe and something I discussed in my last post.
When you first look at the camera, it looks extremely plain, yet it has some Art Deco features, like the lines around the lens and the text used for the name. Pulling the lens away from the body reveals the double box bellows, which are very ribbed silver. When the camera is flat on its back with the bellows extended, they almost give the camera a wedding cake look.
On either side of the camera is a textured finish to the metal design to help with gripping. I don't know how much gripping is needed for such a small and lightweight camera. On the back of the camera are two more grips on the sides of an exposure table explaining the shutter speed depending on the distance to the subject, shutter speed, and aperture set on the camera. There is no mention of different film speeds. Just above the exposure table is a green window, and another green window is the camera's viewfinder. Just below the exposure table is the word "FOREIGN," and on the front, below the lens, is D.R.P. ANG D.R.G.M, meaning this was made for domestic or international sales.
The camera has three shutter speeds: 1/25, 1/50, and 1/100 sec, along with "B" for timed exposures. On the side of the lens is a lever that can be pulled out to change the aperture from wide open at f4.5 to f6.8. This is very similar to what box camera employed to change the aperture. At the 10:00 o'clock position, around the lens is the shutter release, and around the lens is the focus adjustment in meters, with the closest focus being 2 meters.
To take the back off the camera, there are two knobs you pull apart to get to loading and unloading the camera. Two films should be holding cassettes in the back of the camera, but mine only came with one. Interestingly, the film holding cassettes is Hermes Nova. Did the French company Hermes design the film holders, and how was a French company involved in this? This could be where the involvement of Fritz Kaftanski comes into play, as he did move to France in 1939, the year after the camera came out. Were there discussions between Kaftanski and Hermes during the mid-1930s?
On the top of the film holder are four bumps or knobs that need to align with the slots on the camera film advance knob, otherwise, the film cassette won't fit in or out of the camera. Once the slots and the knobs are aligned, the film hold comes out quickly, and you can take it apart to load the film into the cassette.
Once the film is in the camera, the film moves over a geared wheel above the film chamber, rotating a wheel with a white dot and white dash. As the film transports across this wheel, you can view this movement through the green window on the back of the camera, just above the exposure table, so you can tell when your following exposure will be as there is no frame counter on the camera, nor are there numbers on the Bolta film, so this was the only way to tell when you got to the next frame.
Conclusion:
I couldn't use this camera since I didn't have Bolta film to shoot with or a second film cassette, even if I did have the film. The Nova is a beautiful little camera, and I enjoy having it in my collection. Since the camera was only made for a year, how many cameras were made is unknown. Looking at the back door, there is 1114, which may be the serial number, but not 100% positive. Due to the lack of production and not seeing many for sale, I guess it's a reasonably rare camera.
Thank you for taking time out of your busy day to review my film blog. I have another great camera picked for next week's blog, and I hope you'll look out for it.
Until next week, please be safe.