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Welta Perfekta

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WELTA - 1934 - GERMANY (FREITAL)

  • Folding
  • 120 film
  • Very Rare

The Perfekta TLR (twin lens reflex) was produced by Welta in Germany from 1934 to 1940. It was the successor of the Superfekta and remains one of the most fascinating cameras ever built.

Welta wanted to create a 6x6 TLR camera that would fold and fit in a vest pocket.

The resulting design is just an amazing (German) engineering trick. With a simple button, the body of the camera splits vertically following a broken line to give space to a bellow chamber. In the same movement, the waist level viewfinder unfolds and slides horizontally to position itself behind the secondary lens. The viewfinder chamber remains suspended above the bellow, held in place by the front face of the camera. The resulting shape forces the upper film reel to work in the opposite direction from the lower one.

A simple push on the front side reverses the motion, smoothly collapsing the camera so it can fit in a vest pocket (Note that it does require a pretty large vest pocket).

The resulting shape is bizarre to say the least but makes the Perfekta the closest thing to a steampunk transformer you can imagine. Holding it is probably one of the most intriguing experiences in camera collection.

Folding TLRs were great technical innovations on paper and required huge amounts of creativity. Nonetheless they proved to be a dead end in camera development because they were complex and expensive to produce and the bulky viewfinders could not fold with the rest of the camera.

Associated project shares

  • 1 Share of the 99 Cameras Club project

Discover the club's camera collection.
99 Cameras Club for updates.
Read the term and conditions.

Note : This Collectible is not an official product from the represented camera manufacturer. It is a replica of an individual camera from the club's collection and holds no rights or relationships with its manufacturer. It should be regarded only as a token of patronage to the 99 Cameras Club.

WELTA - 1934 - GERMANY (FREITAL)

  • Folding
  • 120 film
  • Very Rare

The Perfekta TLR (twin lens reflex) was produced by Welta in Germany from 1934 to 1940. It was the successor of the Superfekta and remains one of the most fascinating cameras ever built.

Welta wanted to create a 6x6 TLR camera that would fold and fit in a vest pocket.

The resulting design is just an amazing (German) engineering trick. With a simple button, the body of the camera splits vertically following a broken line to give space to a bellow chamber. In the same movement, the waist level viewfinder unfolds and slides horizontally to position itself behind the secondary lens. The viewfinder chamber remains suspended above the bellow, held in place by the front face of the camera. The resulting shape forces the upper film reel to work in the opposite direction from the lower one.

A simple push on the front side reverses the motion, smoothly collapsing the camera so it can fit in a vest pocket (Note that it does require a pretty large vest pocket).

The resulting shape is bizarre to say the least but makes the Perfekta the closest thing to a steampunk transformer you can imagine. Holding it is probably one of the most intriguing experiences in camera collection.

Folding TLRs were great technical innovations on paper and required huge amounts of creativity. Nonetheless they proved to be a dead end in camera development because they were complex and expensive to produce and the bulky viewfinders could not fold with the rest of the camera.

Associated project shares

  • 1 Share of the 99 Cameras Club project

Discover the club's camera collection.
99 Cameras Club for updates.
Read the term and conditions.

Note : This Collectible is not an official product from the represented camera manufacturer. It is a replica of an individual camera from the club's collection and holds no rights or relationships with its manufacturer. It should be regarded only as a token of patronage to the 99 Cameras Club.

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