Kamerastore Digital Database
Manual focus stereo lens made for Contax/Kiev mount 35mm rangefinder cameras by Carl Zeiss starting in 1938. This lens is meant to function with an accessory prism, rangefinder, and viewfinder to take stereoscopic images. The lens is usually found in a kit with these items. It attaches to the outer bayonet of Contax cameras and has its own focusing helicoid. Metal body available in silver.
After Leica’s success with their 35mm rangefinder cameras, optical manufacturer Carl Zeiss wanted a piece of the pie. They introduced their Contax rangefinder in 1932, immediately making themselves the leaders in photographic technology in Germany.
The Contax rangefinders featured a combined rangefinder/viewfinder decades before Leica competitors, and also featured a vertical metal focal plane shutter decades before this would become standard. Contax rangefinders also feature a dual bayonet lens system with an internal and external bayonet for different focal lengths.
After World War II, the Soviet Union seized the Zeiss Ikon plants in Dresden as well as Leica factories. They began to produce their own versions of the popular Leica and Contax rangefinders with looser machining tolerances. The Contax rangefinders were replicated in Kiev, Ukraine.
Because of this, there are many Soviet lenses available for the system on top of offerings from German companies like Carl Zeiss, Hugo Meyer, Schneider-Kreuznach, and Voigtländer.
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