Diary

Diary


Serial Number: Cam0136

Type:
35 mm viewfinder camera

Manufacturer:
Yashica

Country of Origin:
Japan

Production Period:
1978

Approximate Price:
US Dollars 380.00

Reference:
camerapedia.wikia.com

Status: Display

Description:
The Yashica Diary is a 35 mm viewfinder camera made by Yashica in 1978. The camera has an unnamed, coated 38 mm f 2.8 lens, a Tessar-type according to Japanese collector Minocat , with scale focusing by zone symbols. It has only programmed automatic exposure, with a CdS meter cell mounted inside the filter ring, and shutter speeds from 1 60 to 1 360 second. A needle meter scale, showing what aperture will be used, is visible in the brightline viewfinder, and a red low-light warning lamp in the VF appears at light levels below EV 8 the shutter is then locked. The camera has a built-in flash, which retracts into the top housing. Popping the flash up (by pressing the top of it a simpler action than on some other Yashica cameras, such as the 35 MF) puts the camera into auto-flash mode.[2] There is a self-timer, with the lever on the front right of the body (concealed by the lens in the picture here). The camera s name refers to its built-in date-imprint function. Minocat states that the Diary is the first Yashica camera with such a feature, and notes that it can imprint the day of the week, in addition to the date, month and year. Notes on the camera at Collection Appareils describe it as a derivative of the ME 1, which it closely resembles, but which does not have the flash or date functions. Minocat describes the Diary as one of a group of three similar cameras introduced at around the same time (the others being the Flasher and the Snap), but notes that, though similar in use, the Flasher has a different lens. The Diary requires two AA batteries some other Yashica cameras with CdS metering, such as the 35 MF also require a mercury cell to power the meter.