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  2. Nikkormat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikkormat

    Nikkormat (Nikomat in Japan) was a brand of cameras produced by the Japanese optics company Nippon Kogaku K. K., as a consumer version of the professional Nikon brand. . Nikkormat cameras, produced from 1965 until 1978, were simpler and more affordable than Nikon-branded cameras, but accepted the same lenses as the Nikon F serie

  3. Nikon Ohi Factory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikon_Ohi_Factory

    Nikon's Ohi plant in the Ōi district of Shinagawa, Tokyo was first built in 1918 after the formation of Nippon Kogaku K.K. in 1917. [1] Nikon's first camera, the Nikon (1946) was made in this plant. Early cameras like the Nikon I (1948), Nikon M (1949), Nikon S rangefinders and Nikon F,F2 were also made in this plant. [ 2 ]

  4. Nikon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikon

    As of 2009, all of Nikon's Nikon DX format DSLR cameras and the D600, a prosumer FX camera, are produced in Thailand, while their professional and semi-professional Nikon FX format (full frame) cameras (D700, D3, D3S, D3X, D4, D800 and the retro-styled Df) are built in Japan, in the city of Sendai. The Thai facility also produces most of Nikon ...

  5. Nikon Df - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikon_Df

    The Nikon Df is a full-frame F-mount DSLR FX format camera announced by Nikon on November 5, 2013. It uses dedicated mechanical controls similar to those used on mechanical 35mm film SLR camera and had an appearance similar to the Nikon FE and Nikon FM film cameras. [ 1 ]

  6. Nikkorex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikkorex

    The Nikkorex 35 was the first model of the Nikkorex series, produced in 1960. To keep costs low compared to the flagship Nikon F, the Nikkorex 35 used a fixed four-element Nikkor-Q 5 cm f / 2.5 lens instead of an interchangeable F-mount; a Citizen MVL leaf shutter instead of a Leica-inspired focal plane shutter; a fixed, mirror-based viewfinder and fixed focusing screen instead of a glass ...

  7. Nikon I, M and S - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikon_I,_M_and_S

    The original Nikon I, as introduced in 1948, [1] had no flash synchronisation, but was otherwise a fully-fledged up-to-date rangefinder camera. The designers chose the 24 × 32 mm frame size pioneered by the Minolta 35 launched a year earlier by Chiyoda Kogaku , known as the Nippon format , which yielded more frames per length of film, and ...