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The Mamiya Six, also known as the Mamiya-6, is a series of folding medium-format rangefinder cameras manufactured by Mamiya between 1940 and the late 1950s. The cameras captured twelve 6 cm × 6 cm images on 120 film rolls. Some later models could also take sixteen 4.5 cm × 6 cm images.
The Mamiya 6 is a medium-format rangefinder system camera manufactured by Mamiya. It was introduced in 1989, and the line was discontinued in 1995. The coupled viewfinder windows displays frame lines appropriate to the lens mounted. The lens mount partially collapses when the camera is not in use, making it more compact.
Mamiya 6 (1989) — electronic 6 cm × 6 rangefinder camera; Mamiya 6 MF (1993) — added multi-format back feature; 6×7 cm format. Mamiya RB67 Pro-SD.
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). The Mamiya 6 was discontinued around 1999; the Mamiya 7 was produced for 18 ...
Pages in category "Mamiya rangefinder cameras" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9. Mamiya 6;
Medium-format rangefinder cameras continued to be produced until 2014. Recent models included the Mamiya 6 and 7I/7II, the Bronica RF645 and the Fuji G, GF, GS, GW and GSW series. In 1994, Contax introduced an autofocus rangefinder camera, the Contax G.
The original Mamiya Press was introduced in September 1960 with the M-type (Mamiya) back attachment system. It came with a 90 mm lens and has a bellows mechanism on the back that allows up to 15 degrees of tilt and 31 mm of extension. [6] The camera was launched as the Mamiya Press Deluxe for the United States market in 1962. [1]: 130
Omega is the brand name of several medium-format cameras that were initially developed and sold by Simmon Brothers starting from 1954, then licensed to and manufactured by Konica and then Mamiya from 1964 until 1981, when the line was discontinued.