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Japanese Vest (4×5 and 4×6.5) (edit)
folding
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rigid or collapsible
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box
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unknown
4×5 Vesten
999+99*9999999 Victor Vest
unknown Meiro
Japanese 3×4 and 4×4, 4.5×6, 6×6 and 6×9 ->

The Victory (ビクトリー) is a Japanese folding camera taking both 4×6.5 and 3×4 pictures on 127 film.

Description of the Victory A[]

The Victory A (ビクトリーカメラA型) is known from a leaflet published around 1937 and from pictures of some surviving examples.[1] In the leaflet, it is called "Victory Gō Camera" (ビクトリー號カメラ) on one place, with the Japanese character 號 meaning "number" or "type".

The camera has a bakelite body. It's very strong and well constructed with simulated coarse grain leather apperance. All these years later Type 1936 bodies holds up very well, compared to pressed metal folding camera bodies. The folding struts have a complicated arrangement, copied from Kodak designs such as the Pocket Kodak Junior. The cameras chrome is a triple chrome layering, or High chromed appearance not seen again until  the mid 1950's, on high end folding cameras from Japan.

There is a folding optical finder in the middle of the top plate with two optical units and three prongs in the eyepiece inside to hold a colored filter ( Blue) creating a truly unique viewing experience of seeing B&W film in contrast for the human eye, much like in the days of early B&W cinema movie making. There is no body release for the shutter on the top deck. The advance knob is at the right end and has a counter rotation stopping rachet lock. there is a spool holder at the left end. The rachet lock spool end  can be pulled out only after it is turned counter-clockwise. The back is hinged to the left and the text says that it contains three red windows, the middle one being used for 4×6.5 exposures and the other ones for 3×4. This camera uses 127 sized roll film. A film plane mask would be necessary in order to get 3x4cm sized negatives. The three red windows on the back have NO sliding covers to block light. The hinged back uses a unique  male female counter-part sliding bar locking design, with extremely large  film plane springs inside;  too hold the 127 rollfilm paper backing very flat!

The shutter is everset and gives B, 25, 50 speeds. The release lever is attached to the front of the shutter housing. The model name Victory Go is engraved at the top of the shutter plate. ("Go" is probably the Japanese character 號 told above.) The marking on the right reads STRAIT SHUTTER, probably the shutter name; on the left there is the brand name EAGLE CAMERA. The model year is indicated at the bottom( 1936), and the words MADE IN JAPAN are engraved below. The leaflet reads TYPE 1935 or perhaps 1936, some surviving examples have TYPE 1936 and one has TYPE 1937. Despite the different model years, no other change is visible.

The lens is fixed-focus and the rim is engraved VICTORY GO ANASTIGMAT 1:9.5 F 6.3. On most lenses, "1:9.5" would indicate the maximum aperture and the focal length would be written "F=6.3" (9.5cm) with an indication of a unit, for example centimetres. In the case of the Victory Go, F 6.3 stands for the maximum aperture, as indicated by the aperture scale going from 6.3 to 25, and the meaning of 1:9.5 is unclear.

Advertisements and other documents[]

In the leaflet cited above, the Victory A was offered for ¥18 including the portrait attachment. The text says that the "large aperture" of the lens equipping the Victory A only makes pictures possible from the infinity down to 10 feet, and that the attachment is needed to take closer pictures, down to 5 feet.

The official price list compiled in October 1940 and published in January 1941 also has a camera called "Victory", listed for ¥23 with no further detail.[2] There is no indication of the company which made or sold the camera.

Z99 Victory Go 127 rollfilm camera japan 1936 001

Victory Go 1936 version front.....

Z99 Victory Go 127 rollfilm camera japan 1936 002

Victory go 1936 version Back , NOTE; different three red window configuration.

Other versions[]

Sugiyama does not show the Victory A but two other models.[3] None of them has folding struts, and the lens standard is manually pulled out on two rails after opening the folding bed. The folding finder is different too, with the rear part folding over the front one.

In both cases, the shutter plate is marked Victory at the top and has a logo at the bottom, perhaps the letter "Y" inside a circle. The only speed settings are 25 and B.

The lens is fixed-focus and the aperture scale goes from 8 to 32 on both cameras. One camera[4] has no lens engraving and certainly a single-element lens. The other[5] has a lens engraving similar to the Victory A, with VICTORY GO ANASTIGMAT and perhaps 1:5.5 F 8. The meaning of 5.5 is again unclear. This example has the top of the advance knob finished in black.

Notes[]

  1. Leaflet: undated leaflet for the Victory, Semi Dymos, Reex, Baby Ref, Union Ref and Baby Chrome. Surviving examples: example pictured in this page and here at AEI Collectibles, and examples observed in online auctions.
  2. "Kokusan shashinki no kōtei kakaku", type 2, section 2.
  3. Sugiyama, items 4103–4.
  4. Sugiyama, item 4103.
  5. Sugiyama, item 4104.

Bibliography[]

Original documents[]

  • Anonymous company. Leaflet for the Victory, Semi Dymos, Reex, Baby Ref, Union Ref and Baby Chrome. Date not indicated. Document reproduced in this Flickr album by Rebollo_fr.
  • "Kokusan shashinki no kōtei kakaku" (国産写真機の公定価格, Set prices of the Japanese cameras), listing Japanese camera production as of October 25, 1940 and setting the retail prices from December 10, 1940. Published in Asahi Camera January 1941 and reproduced in Shōwa 10—40nen kōkoku ni miru kokusan kamera no rekishi (昭和10〜40年広告にみる国産カメラの歴史, Japanese camera history as seen in advertisements, 1935—1965). Tokyo: Asahi Shinbunsha, 1994. ISBN 4-02-330312-7. Pp.108—9. Type 2, section 2.

Recent sources[]

The Victory is not listed in Kokusan kamera no rekishi.

Links[]

In Japanese:

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