Konica (コニカ, Konika) was a Japanese manufacturer of, among other products,
film, film
cameras, camera accessories, photographic and photo-processing equipment,
photocopiers,
fax machines and
laser printers, founded in 1873. The company merged with Japanese peer
Minolta in 2003, with the new company named
Konica Minolta.
History
The company traces its history back to 1873 (pre-dating
Kodak in the photography business) when
pharmacist Rokusaburo Sugiura began selling photographic materials at his shop in Konishiya Rokubē, the biggest pharmacy trader in
Tokyo at that time.[2]
In 1878, Rokusaburō succeeded to his family and renamed Rokuemon VI (Rokudaime Rokuemon). He gave the original shop to his younger brother and launched a new shop, Konishi Honten (Konishi Main Shop) in the
Nihonbashi district of Tokyo.
In 1882, Konishi launched a project to produce photography related materials in Japan: those products were imported at that time. In 1902, Konishi began to sell the "Cherry Portable Camera" (チェリー手提用暗函), the first Japanese produced end-user oriented camera. New products were released respectively, and Konishi Main Shop became the leading camera company in Japan. In 1921, Konishi had his elder son succeed to the family and thus company head with the name, and in this occasion Konishi Honten was turned into a company Konishiroku Honten. The name Konishiroku was taken from the abbreviation of their names, Konishi Rokuemon.
Konishiroku released their "Konica I" type camera in 1948, after which they would name their own company in 1987. Since 1949 Konica produced a
Medium format-camera Pearl.[3] From 1964 until 1975 Konica manufactured Medium format Omega-cameras , which used Konica's Hexanon-lenses; they were named Koni-Omega for the global market. Two models were named Konica Press for the Japanese market.[4][5]
Konica's
single lens reflex cameras pioneered
auto-exposure in cameras with focal-plane shutters and fully interchangeable lenses. The Konica Autoreflex of 1965 used an external
light meter cell to set the
lens diaphragm automatically after the user selected a
shutter speed. With the Autoreflex T of 1968, Konica improved this design into a
through-the-lens meter, using the same automation system. (The user could also set the exposure manually on these cameras). Other camera makers eventually adopted auto-exposure as well, but Konica was the first.
When Konishiroku got the new name Konica in 1987, the company employed about 4,935 people.[6]
In the 1990s Konica signed its first major contract with
Los Angeles County providing leasing of copiers to the
Los Angeles Superior Court. This resulted in a major shift in the industry that had sold only copiers before. The County initial order of 250 copiers required Konica to redirect all of it inventory throughout North America to the County.
On 5 August 2003, Konica merged with
Minolta to form
Konica Minolta. In 2006, Konica Minolta exited the photography business.[7] In March 2006, the merged company closed down its photo imaging division, which produced
color film, color paper,
photo chemicals and digital
minilab machines. Its
digital SLR camera section was transferred to
Sony, which currently known as the
Sony Alpha line.
Dai Nippon (DNP) purchased Konica's
Odawara factory site and continues to produce paper under its own brand, while Seapac acquired the Konica chemical factory.
Film
Konica was a major producer of 35mm film and related products, including film development processors and printing technology. While never equal to giants like
Kodak or
Fujifilm, the recognized quality of Konica film ensured general presence on market. Originally Konica film and paper was sold under the brand name of "
Sakura" meaning Cherry Blossom in English.
In the mid 1980s, Konica launched its SR range of film, then SR-V (1987), SR-G (1989), Super SR (1991), Super XG (1993), VX and finally "Centuria" in 1999.
Cameras
35 mm rangefinder and viewfinder cameras
Rubikon (1936?)[8] Prototype of Konica I, development stopped by WWII, a few made after war
Rubicon (1936?) An X-ray camera that uses 35mm X-ray film, same chassis as Rubikon/Konica I
Konica "I" (1946) Konishiroku's first 35mm camera to see full production. Several variants (lenses, shutters, viewfinder, flash mount).
Konica II (1950)
Konica IIB (1960) (Variants with f3.5 and f2.8 lenses)
Konica IIB-m (1956)
Konica IIA (1956) First model to use the superb 48mm f2 Hexanon lens.
Konica III (1956) Variants with Konirapid-S & Seikosha MXL shutters, most with 48/2 lens, rarer version w/48mm f2.4 Hexanon
Konica IIIA (1958) Variants with 48/2 & 50/1.8 Hexanons
Konica IIIM (1959) Variants with
Copal MXV & Seikosha SLV shutters, all with 50/1.8 Hexanon. Built-in meter, 1st Konica w/hot shoe (non-standard)
Konica Auto S3 (export) (1973) Great little camera based upon the C35 line. Fast lens. AE only. "C35 FD" in Japan. Auto S3 produced in black only. C35 FD produced in chrome, too.
Konica C35 EF (1976) first model with built-in flash. "Pikkari"
Pocket 400: with Hexar-lenses (focus 28 mm) and exposure automatic, about 1975[20][21]
F-mount SLRs
The first series of Konica
single-lens reflex cameras used the Konica F
lens mount, named after the first camera to use it. This was a bayonet mount, and is not compatible with later Konica lens mounts. The
flange focal distance of the F-mount was 40.5 mm, one of the smallest ever used for a 35 mm SLR. The diameter was 40 mm.
It is not identical to
Nikon F-mount, which has a much longer flange focal distance of 46.5 mm.
Konica SLR interchangeable lenses were named Hexanon. The optical quality of most Hexanon lenses is regarded as truly superb, particularly the older fixed-focal length (prime) lenses. Many camera manufacturers of interchangeable lenses produce a few great lenses among their line, but Konica managed to achieve near excellent quality over a broad range of focal lengths[25] in lens tests conducted by several photographic publications over the years. Hexanon lenses were used by the Japanese government as the standard against which all other lenses were measured.[citation needed]
^Dominique Turpin, Xiaobai Shen: Casebook on General Management in Asia Pacific. Macmillan International Higher Education, 1999, ISBN 978-0-333-71792-9 S. 216 (Konica at
Google Books).