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  2. Mamiya 645 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamiya_645

    The Mamiya 645 camera systems are a series of medium format film and digital cameras and lenses manufactured by Mamiya and its successors. They are called "645" because they use the nominal 6 cm x 4.5 cm film size from 120 roll film.

  3. Fuji GX680 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuji_GX680

    The Fuji GX680 has quite large physical dimensions for a medium-format camera, but compared to the typical monorail/studio large-format camera, the Fuji GX680 is more compact. Although the Fuji GX680 was designed for studio work due to its size and weight, a neck-strap was offered for mobile work.

  4. Pentax 645 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentax_645

    The Pentax 645 is a medium format single-lens reflex system camera manufactured by Pentax. It was introduced in 1984, along with a complementary line of lenses . It captures images nominally 6 cm × 4.5 cm on 120 , 220, and 70 mm film, though the actual size of the images is 56 mm × 41.5 mm.

  5. Mamiya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamiya

    The RB67 was followed by the more advanced RZ67 6x7cm frame format camera in 1982. These cameras established Mamiya as a major medium-format professional camera manufacturer, together with Hasselblad, Rollei, Bronica and Pentax. In 1989, Mamiya introduced the Mamiya 6 (6x6cm) rangefinder camera. In 1995, this was followed by the Mamiya 7 (6x7cm ...

  6. Fuji GS645 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuji_GS645

    The Fuji GS645 series was a lineup of cameras manufactured by Fujifilm of Japan. The lineup included several cameras, differentiated by their focal length and by some cosmetic features: The GS645, GS645W, and GS645S. The cameras, released between March 1983 and October 1984, are medium format and accept either 120 or 220 film. The cameras take ...

  7. Voigtländer Bessa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voigtländer_Bessa

    These were succeeded by improved versions that added a folding frame finder (1930–35) and dual-format capability (1932–33, 3.4×5.5 cm; then 1935–37, 4.5×6 cm). [9] The 1935 model was the basis for the Bessa Rangefinder , which added improved lenses and a coupled rangefinder to assist in setting focus. [ 10 ]