Baby Virus

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Japanese Baby (3×4) and Four (4×4) (edit)
folding 3×4 Baby Balnet | Doris | Baby Doris | Baby Germa | Kinsi | Baby Leotax | Loren | Baby Lyra | Baby Pearl | Baby Pilot | Baby Rosen | Baby Suzuka | Baby Virus | Walz
4×4 Adler Four | Rosen Four
rigid or collapsible 3×4 Baika | Baby Chrome | Comet | Cyclon | Gelto | Baby Germa | Gokoku | Hamond | Kinka Lucky | Lausar | Light | Baby Light | Molby | Mulber | Olympic | Baby Oso | Peacock | Picny | Ricohl | Rorox | Shinko Baby | Slick | Baby Sport | Tsubasa Arawashi | Zessan
3.5×4 Kenko 35
4×4 Alma Four | Andes Four | Anny 44 | Arsen | Balnet Four | Bonny Four | Freude | Kalimar 44 | Auto Keef | Kraft | Letix | Mykey-4 | Olympic Four | Roico | Royal Senior | Seica | Terra Junior | Vero Four | Welmy 44 | Yashica Future 127
unknown Baby First | Baby Lyra Flex
Japanese SLR, TLR, pseudo TLR and stereo models ->
Japanese 4×5 and 4×6.5, 4.5×6, 6×6 and 6×9 ->

The Baby Virus are Japanese 3×4cm cameras, whose name is uncertain and of which no pictures have been observed and no surviving example is known.

Contents

Strut-folding

Kokusan kamera no rekishi describes a bakelite strut-folding camera under the name "Baby Uirus" (ベビーウイルス, "Baby Virus" is more likely) and mentions two magazine articles, in Asahi Camera September 1938 and in Camera Club January 1939.[1] This source says that the camera was manufactured by "Takinogawa Kōryō-sha" (滝の川向陵舎). Takinogawa is a ward of Tokyo, written 滝野川, and the company was more likely called Kōryō-sha and based in Takinogawa.

The description says that the film is loaded through the bottom plate, the film plane is curved and the film advance is controlled by two covered red windows. The shutter is said to have only bulb and instant settings, and the lens is said to be a fixed-focus meniscus.[2]

Telescopic tube

A camera called "Baby New Yurisu" (ベビーニューユリス, the Roman name is uncertain) is mentioned in the "Inquiry into Japanese cameras" ("Kokusan shashinki no genjōchōsa"), listing the Japanese camera production as of April 1943.[3] It was registered as made by Kōryō-sha (向凌舎, the same company name written with different characters) and distributed by Koshimitsu (越光), and it was listed as a 3×4cm camera made of light alloy and having a telescopic tube. This description does not fit the previous Baby Virus, and the Baby New Yurisu was perhaps a successor made by the same company. The camera has a Yurisu (ユリス) 55/6.3 three-element lens made by Koshimitsu and a New Yurisu (ニューユリス) shutter giving 25–150, B speeds made by Koshimitsu too.[4]

Notes

  1. Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 334. This source makes many mistakes in Roman spelling.
  2. Description from Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p. 334.
  3. "Inquiry into Japanese cameras" ("Kokusan shashinki no genjōchōsa"), item 154.
  4. "Inquiry into Japanese cameras" ("Kokusan shashinki no genjōchōsa"), lens item K1, shutter item 18-V-10.

Bibliography

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