Camera Name: | Vito |
Type: | 35mm view/rangefinder camera |
Maker: | Voigtländer |
Lens Mount: | fixed |
Focus: | manual |
Exposure: | manual |
Dimensions: | (II, closed)[1] |
Weight: | (II) |
Shutter: | Compur and Prontor leaf |
Shutter Speeds: | 1– or + B, X/M |
The Vito and Vitomatic, Vitoret, and Vito Automatic were several related lines of 35 mm compact viewfinder and rangefinder cameras made by Voigtländer from the 1940s through the early 1970s, equipped with leaf shutters, similar in concept to and marketed against the competing Kodak Retina cameras manufactured by Kodak. All of these cameras were fixed-lens models; the models in the Vito line identified with Roman numerals were equipped with folding mechanisms and collapsible lenses for portability, while the others were rigid, non-folding cameras.
Within the Voigtländer lineup of 35 mm film cameras, the Vito were a simplified camera line aimed at amateur photographers; the high-end Prominent (135) were rangefinders meant for professionals, and the mid-range Vitessa were available with an expanded selection of mostly fixed lenses for advanced amateurs. Voigtländer also offered a line of single lens reflex cameras, the Bessamatic/Ultramatic.
After the Voigtländer brand was acquired by Carl Zeiss AG in 1956, the Vito line continued to be marketed to amateur photographers, spawning sub-lines with simplified, semi-autoexposure controls (Vitomatic and Vito Automatic) and smaller sizes (Vitoret). Zeiss Ikon ceased camera production in 1971, and the Vito/Vitomatic/Vitoret brands have been licensed and revived several times since then, including for 110 film (1970s Vitoret 110, by Rollei) and 35 mm (various point-and-shoot cameras, in the 1980s by Balda and again in the 1990s by Samsung).
The first Vito cameras are identified with Roman numerals to distinguish the different models. The Vito [I] was released in 1940 with a Compur leaf shutter and Skopar lens, which was derived from the Zeiss Tessar.[2] [3] Few examples were made as World War II began absorbing German production. A new version of the Vito [I] was issued in 1947 with a Prontor shutter, after the war.These were succeeded by the Vito II (1950), Vito III (1951), and Vito IIa (1955).
The II can be distinguished by a larger top cover, which lacks the viewfinder protrusion; it was initially released without an accessory shoe, but one was later integrated into the top plate. The post-war lens, a 50 mm, was given the Color-Skopar designation. Versions are available with a Prontor (minimum shutter speed of s) or Synchro-Compur ( s) shutter.[4]
The III uses a drop-down bed for the folding mechanism, while earlier Vito cameras use a side-hinged mechanism; it also includes an integrated, coupled rangefinder and a faster 50 mm Ultron lens, shared with the Vitessa and Prominent (135);[4] controls and handling are similar to the Prominent.[5]
The IIa has one top-deck knob (the other Vito cameras with Roman numerals have two) and can be identified by its enlarged viewfinder window; it shares the Color-Skopar lens with the earlier II. It has a similar appearance to the contemporary (lettered) Vito models.[6]
The Vito name was revived in the 1980s for a line of plastic-bodied point-and-shoot cameras (P&S) similar in appearance and functionality to the Minox 35 line, with a fold-down lens cover. The P&S Vito was built by Balda. Unlike the earlier folding Vito line, the P&S Vito used wider-than-normal lenses, branded either Color Voigtar (P&S Vito, 38 mm) or Color Skopar (P&S Vito C and Vito CS, 38 mm).
The Minox 35 was developed by Karl-Heinz Lange while Minox was owned by Rollei; when Rollei sold the Voigtländer brand in 1981, Lange moved to Balda, where he designed the P&S Vito,[7] which also was sold under additional brand names, including the Balda CA 35 and Revue 35XE. These are zone-focus cameras with program autoexposure.[8] A side-mounted flash is available for these cameras.[9]
1981 | C | , CdS | Color Skopar 38 mm | Also sold as Balda CA 35 with Baldanon lens and Revue 35XE with Revuenon lens | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1982–84 | CS | , CdS | Adds self-timer; also sold as Balda CE 35 | ||||
1983–85 | — | , CdS | Color Voigtar 38 mm |
The lettered Vito camera models eschewed the folding mechanism in favor of a rigid, fixed lens, trading some portability for simplified operation. The earlier Vito B line (1954–58) uses a novel base plate design for film loading,[6] while the succeeding Vito C line (1959–68) uses a standard swing-open back. The B was equipped with one of two Color-Skopar 50 mm lenses (either or) and the Pronto or Prontor SVS shutter had a minimum shutter speed of or, respectively.[6] [11] C models were equipped with Lanthar or Color-Skopar lenses (both 50 mm); there are some variations in the color of the bezel around the meter, rangefinder, and viewfinder window.[12]
Multiple variants of the lettered Vito cameras were made with and without light meters and/or rangefinders.
1954–58 | B | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
BL | ||||
BR | ||||
1959–68 | C | |||
CD | , uncoupled selenium | |||
CL | , coupled selenium | |||
CLR | , coupled selenium | |||
CS | , coupled CdS | |||
CSR | , coupled CdS |
In the 1970s, Rollei acquired the Voigtländer brand from Zeiss and released several compact rangefinder cameras under the VF series, some of which also were sold as Rollei-branded cameras. The first model in the VF series was the VF 101 (1974), a close copy of the Zeiss Ikon/Contessa S 312 (1971), one of the last cameras that had been developed and sold by Zeiss.[13] [14] The next model was VF 135 (1976), a slightly modified version of the earlier Rollei XF35 (1974).[15] [16] The final model was developed by Rollei and sold as the VF 35 F (1981) with an integrated, pop-up electronic flash unit.[17]
Towards the end of Vito B production, Voigtländer began releasing the Vitomatic line, which simplified the controls by adding match-needle metering with a combined shutter speed/aperture selector ring and scale focusing,[18] although manual aperture, shutter speed, and focusing distance selection are still possible.[19] These were made in three sub-generations:
1957 | I | , selenium | Color-Skopar 50 mm | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1958 | II | , selenium | ||||
1960 | Ia | , selenium | ||||
IIa | rowspan=2, selenium | rowspan=2 | ||||
1961 | IIa | Ultron 50 mm | ||||
1965 | Ib | , selenium | Color-Skopar 50 mm | |||
IIb | , selenium | |||||
IIIb | , selenium | Ultron 50 mm | ||||
1966 | ICS | , CdS | Color-Skopar 50 mm | |||
IICS | , CdS | |||||
IIICS | , CdS | Ultron 50 mm |
The Vito automatic line used a simplified exposure setting system in which the shutter speed was fixed according to the film speed, and the aperture was set automatically based on the coupled meter.[23]
The original automatic was released in 1960. It was succeeded by the automatic II (1961), automatic R (1962), and automatic I (1963); cosmetically, they resembled the contemporaneous first-generation Vitomatic (I/II and Ia/IIa), but carried lenses branded Lanthar rather than Color-Skopar.
1960 | — | Lanthar 50 mm | Simple green/red exposure signal in viewfinder | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1961 | II | Selenium meter surrounding lens; match-needle metering window on top deck | |||||
1962 | R | Adds coupled rangefinder to original automatic | |||||
1963 | I | Color-Lanthar 50 mm | Reissue of original automatic |
The Vitoret line includes manual-exposure viewfinder and rangefinder cameras with a limited range of selectable shutter speeds (in some cases,,, or sec + B; later models added a s setting)[25] and scale focusing marks. Multiple variants of the Vitoret cameras were made with and without light meters and/or rangefinders. Most are equipped with Lanthar or Color-Lanthar 50 mm lenses; the Vitoret (no suffix) cameras have Vaskar lenses with the same focal length and maximum aperture.[26] Later production cameras (starting from approximately 1966) have squared-off right and left sides, while earlier cameras have rounded sides.
1962 | — | Early Vitorets had rounded ends, later Vitorets had squared-off ends starting from approximately 1966/67 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
D | , uncoupled selenium | Available in "Rapid" variant, which uses a film cartridge take-up spool and omits the rewind crank | ||||
1963 | F | Includes flashbulb socket under accessory shoe | ||||
R | Early production models have a square rangefinder window; later versions have a diamond-shaped window | |||||
1964 | L | , coupled selenium | ||||
1965 | DR | , uncoupled selenium | ||||
1967 | LR | , coupled selenium | ||||
1970 | S | Faster shutter, export model |
After Zeiss Ikon ceased camera production in 1971, the Voigtländer brand was acquired by Rollei, who produced a line of 110 film cameras as the Vitoret 110 and Vitoret 110 EL in Singapore. The camera was available with (EL) and without a matching Easy Light System electronic flash unit.[28]
The Vito, Vitessa, and Vitomatic names were revived in the 1990s for a line of automatic focus point-and-shoot cameras, many with zoom lenses. These were manufactured by Samsung, which had acquired the Rollei brand, and identical cameras were sold under the Rollei and Samsung brands.[29] Cameras include:
Samsung | Rollei | Voigtländer | Lens | |
---|---|---|---|---|
AF Slim | Prego AF | Vito C-AF | Voigtar 35 mm | |
— | Giro 70 WA | Vito 70 | Zoomar 28~70 mm | |
Maxima Zoom 70GL / 70XL | Giro 70 | Vitessa 70 | Zoomar 38~70 mm | |
Maxima Zoom Evoca 115 | Prego 115 | Vitomatic 115 | Zoom-Lanthar 38~115 mm | |
IBEX / Maxima 1450, Slim Zoom 145 | Prego 145 | Vito 145 | Super Zoomar 38~145 mm |
The fast Ultron double Gauss lens was available for selected models, while two versions of the Tessar-derived Color-Skopar were available for most classic Vito and Vitomatic models. Both lens types were designed by Albrecht Tronnier.[30] [31] The lower-specified lines (Vitoret and Vito automatic) used the Lanthar, Color-Lanthar, or Vaskar lenses, also derived from the Tessar, with similar design and performance as the Skopar lenses.
Modern revivals (after 1972) of classic Voigtländer marques use the same names as classic lenses, but may not be similar in design.