Certo
Saxon camera craftsmanship from behind the Iron Curtain
Certo is one of Dresden's great survivors, a camera company that weathered two world wars, Soviet nationalization, and four decades behind the Iron Curtain while never losing the fundamental Saxon instinct for building things properly. The Dollina series alone justifies Certo's place in photographic history, but dig deeper and you will find a catalog of cameras that rewards the curious collector with genuine discoveries.
| Founded | 1902, Dresden, Germany |
| Founder/Origin | Certo Camera-Werk |
| Headquarters | Dresden, Germany (later East Germany) |
| Models in Archive | 5 |
| Golden Era | 1930s–1950s |
| Known For | Dollina rangefinder series, folding cameras, medium format box cameras |
History
Certo Camera-Werk was established in Dresden in 1902, joining a constellation of Saxon camera manufacturers that would make this single city the undisputed capital of European camera production for half a century. From the beginning, Certo positioned itself as a maker of solid, reliable cameras for the enthusiast market, filling the space between cheap box cameras and expensive professional instruments. The company's early output included a variety of plate cameras, folding cameras, and medium format designs that sold well across Germany and beyond.
The 1930s proved to be Certo's golden age. The Dollina series of 35mm folding cameras, introduced in the mid-1930s, demonstrated that Certo could compete with the best that Dresden and Wetzlar had to offer. The Dollina II and Dollina III featured coupled rangefinders, fast Schneider or Zeiss lenses, and Compur shutters, all wrapped in a folding body that slipped into a coat pocket. These were genuinely sophisticated cameras, and they earned a loyal following among European photographers who appreciated the combination of portability and optical quality.
Like every Dresden manufacturer, Certo was devastated by the Allied bombing of 1945 and the subsequent Soviet dismantling of industrial equipment as war reparations. The company was reconstituted as a state-owned enterprise (VEB Certo) and continued producing cameras under East German management. The postwar Certo cameras, including the Certo Six medium format camera, maintained a respectable level of quality despite the constraints of the planned economy. By the 1960s, Certo was absorbed into the larger VEB Pentacon combine, and the brand name gradually faded from production. But the cameras endure, and they remain some of the best values in vintage photography.
Notable Cameras
Dollina III
The Dollina III is Certo's masterpiece. This 35mm folding camera features a coupled rangefinder, a Schneider Xenar or Zeiss Tessar lens, and a Compur-Rapid shutter, all in a body that folds flat enough to fit in a jacket pocket. When photographers talk about the golden age of German camera engineering, they are talking about cameras like this. The Dollina III delivers image quality that holds up against any fixed-lens camera of its era, and the rangefinder focusing is smooth and accurate. Finding a clean example with a coated lens is a genuine thrill, because you are holding a camera that represents the absolute peak of 1930s Saxon craftsmanship.
Dollina II
The Dollina II is the slightly simpler sibling, lacking the rangefinder of the III but retaining the excellent lens and shutter combination. Scale-focused by the experienced shooter, it is actually faster to use in many situations than its rangefinder-equipped sibling. The Dollina II is a camera for the photographer who trusts their eye and their sense of distance, and it rewards that trust with razor-sharp images from its Tessar-type lens.
Certo Six
The Certo Six is a postwar medium format camera that shoots 6x6cm on 120 film. It represents the continuation of Saxon camera traditions under East German state ownership, and while it lacks the refinement of the prewar Dollinas, it has its own utilitarian charm. The Six was built for the working photographer in the German Democratic Republic, and it does its job with admirable straightforwardness. Load it, compose, shoot. The 6x6 negatives are generous and forgiving, and the lens, while not world-class, delivers honest results that print beautifully in the darkroom.
Compact
- Dollina (1935-1940) — The Certo Dollina is a compact 35mm folding camera produced by the German manufacturer Certo between 1935 and 1940. Designed as a portable, high-quality
- Dollina II (1936-1940) — Exact end of production is uncertain, but likely around 1939 due to wartime disruptions. Full specifications and review.
- SL100 (1970-1974) — Designed as an entry-level point-and-shoot option, it features a fixed lens, simple viewfinder, and fully manual expo.... Full specifications and review.
Folding
- Six (1932-1958) — produced by Certo-Cameras GmbH of Dresden, primarily from the mid-1930s to the late 1940s; production likely ceased b.... Full specifications and review.
Folding Camera
- Dollina 0 (1936-) — A compact 35mm folding camera introduced as a low-cost model in Certo's mid-1930s lineup.
- Dollina I (1936-) — Certo Dollina I (1935–1939) — 35mm folding camera with Compur 300 shutter and unit focusing. At 560g, it's a compact gem of pre-war German engineering.
Medium Format Viewfinder Camera
- Certina (1966-) — Certo Certina (1966) — East German 120 film viewfinder camera with 6x6/4x4 formats, steel body, meniskus lens, and dual red windows. A lo-fi medium format curiosity.
Other Models
- Certo — Vintage Camera — Explore 4 Certo vintage camera models — specs, production history, reviews, and market values in the VTA archive.
- Certina (1966-) — Certo Certina (1966) — East German 120 film viewfinder camera with 6x6/4x4 formats, steel body, meniskus lens, and dual red windows. A lo-fi medium format curiosity.
- Dollina (1935-1940) — The Certo Dollina is a compact 35mm folding camera produced by the German manufacturer Certo between 1935 and 1940. Designed as a portable, high-quality
- Dollina 0 (1936-) — A compact 35mm folding camera introduced as a low-cost model in Certo's mid-1930s lineup.
- Dollina I (1936-) — Certo Dollina I (1935–1939) — 35mm folding camera with Compur 300 shutter and unit focusing. At 560g, it's a compact gem of pre-war German engineering.
- Dollina II (1936-1940) — Exact end of production is uncertain, but likely around 1939 due to wartime disruptions. Full specifications and review.
- DOLLINA III — Certo Dollina III — 1930s 35mm folding rangefinder with Schneider Xenar f/2.8 lens and Compur-Rapid shutter. Peak Saxon craftsmanship.
- DOLLY MODEL B — A folding camera made by the German company Certo, using 127 roll film to produce 3x4 cm exposures.
- PHOT — Certo Certo-Phot (1958) — 422g medium format viewfinder camera with 75mm f8 meniscus lens, 1/50s shutter, and 6x6cm output. A simple East German box-style shooter.
- Six (1932-1958) — produced by Certo-Cameras GmbH of Dresden, primarily from the mid-1930s to the late 1940s; production likely ceased b.... Full specifications and review.
- SL 100 — A simple 35mm viewfinder camera made in Dresden for beginner and child photographers.
- SL100 (1970-1974) — Designed as an entry-level point-and-shoot option, it features a fixed lens, simple viewfinder, and fully manual expo.... Full specifications and review.