When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Zoom lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoom_lens

    A zoom lens is a system of camera lens elements for which the focal length (and thus angle of view) can be varied, as opposed to a fixed-focal-length (FFL) lens . A true zoom lens or optical zoom lens is a type of parfocal lens, one that maintains focus when its focal length changes. [1]

  3. History of photographic lens design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_photographic...

    They began breaking new ground around 1960: the Nippon Kogaku Auto-Nikkor 8.5–25 cm f/4-4.5 (1959), for the Nikon F, was the first telephoto zoom lens for 35mm still cameras (and second zoom after the Zoomar), [141] the Canon 50mm f/0.95 (1961), for the Canon 7 35mm RF, with its superwide aperture, was the first Japanese lens a photographer ...

  4. Zoomar lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoomar_Lens

    1959 Voigtländer Bessamatic, fitted with DKL-mount Zoomar lens (36~82 mm, f /2.8), first production zoom lens for still photography. The Zoomar lens was the first commercially successful zoom lens, designed by optical engineer Frank G. Back as an outgrowth of his research on viewfinders and variable focal length projectors for the United ...

  5. Camera lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camera_lens

    Different kinds of camera lenses, including wide angle, telephoto and speciality. A camera lens (also known as photographic lens or photographic objective) is an optical lens or assembly of lenses (compound lens) used in conjunction with a camera body and mechanism to make images of objects either on photographic film or on other media capable of storing an image chemically or electronically.

  6. List of standard zoom lenses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_standard_zoom_lenses

    The increasingly popular 20-50mm zoom range is arguably more versatile than the more established 16-35mm lenses and shares the minimum 2.5× optical zoom ratio of 28-70mm lenses but shifted to a wider field of view.

  7. List of Minolta A-mount lenses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Minolta_A-mount_lenses

    When the "xi" series cameras were introduced with the 7xi in 1991, new and updated lenses were released with three additional contacts (eight total) to support an in-lens motor for body-controlled power zoom, which was used by the "fuzzy logic" system in that camera body.

  8. Pierre Angénieux - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Angénieux

    In 1964, Angénieux received a Scientific or Technical award "for the development of a ten-to-one Zoom Lens for cinematography." [2] [3] He was honoured with the Grand Prix des Ingénieurs Civils in France in 1973, and with the 1989 Gordon E. Sawyer Award. [4] His company also produced lenses for the Kodak Retinette and Pony cameras. [5]

  9. Kiron Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiron_Corporation

    Kiron Corporation was a subsidiary of Kino Precision Industries, Ltd., a Japanese manufacturer of photographic lenses.Kiron was based in Carson, California, operating in the 1980s primarily as the United States distributor of Kiron lenses, which were offered in a variety of mounts compatible with many popular 135 film manual focus single-lens reflex camera systems.