Hüttig

From Camerapedia.org

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Revision as of 20:00, 28 September 2008
U. kulick (Talk | contribs)

← Previous diff
Current revision
Camerawiki (Talk | contribs)
(Links)
Line 37: Line 37:
==Links== ==Links==
* [http://www.collection-appareils.fr/general/html/liste5_imagettes.php#Huttig Cameras] at www.collection-appareils.fr * [http://www.collection-appareils.fr/general/html/liste5_imagettes.php#Huttig Cameras] at www.collection-appareils.fr
 +* [http://photo.even.free.fr/col_app.php?type=huttig&title=Huttig Huttig page] at [http://photo.even.free.fr/ Collection G. Even's site]
[[Category: German camera makers|Hüttig]] [[Category: German camera makers|Hüttig]]

Current revision

Camera industry in Dresden
Balda | Certo | Eho-Altissa | Ernemann | Feinmess | Hüttig | ICA | Ihagee | Kochmann | Kerman | KW | Eugen Loeber | Ludwig | Mentor | Mimosa | Pentacon | Richter | Wünsche | Zeiss Ikon | Zeh
Camera distributors in Dresden
Stöckig
Camera industry in Freital
Beier | Pouva | Thowe | Welta


In 1856 Richard Hüttig became a joiner in Berlin. He had been apprentice in a joinery for camera cases. He became master of this profession. Later, in the 1860ies, he became chief of a big camera factory which moved to Dresden in 1887. His company, Richard Hüttig & Sohn (later Hüttig AG), had been the biggest European camera maker for a certain period. It was the first company in Dresden that produced a single lens reflex camera, the Zeus-Spiegel-Kamera. In 1904 it offered 90 camera types in 400 variations. After the merger of his company into ICA his career declined. As a poor old man he got a place in a home for the aged from the Council of Dresden.

cameras

  • Afpi
  • Atom (4.5×6cm folding, 1908)
  • Aviso (4.5×6cm magazine camera, 1907)
  • Box Kamera (1890)
  • Briefmarkenkamera (earlier sold in England by Butcher's)
  • Cameo & Cameo Stereo
  • Carmen
  • Cosmopolit
  • Cupido
  • Cupido Stereolette
  • Elegant
  • Excelsior
  • Fichtners Excelsior Geheimkamera
  • Furror Detektiv Kamera
  • Gnom (4.5×6, 6.5×9 or 9×12 magazine camera, 1900)
  • Halifax
  • Hekla
  • Helios I, II, Stereopanorama
  • Hochtourist
  • Ideal (9×12cm folding, 1908)
  • Ideal stereo
  • Ingo
  • Jelco
  • Jul
  • Lloyd
  • Merkur (box, 1900)
  • Monopol, Monopol stereo
  • Trilby Magazinkamera (1905)
  • Zeus Detectivkamera
  • Zeus-Spiegel-Kamera (1896) I & II

Links