Fujica
Fuji's camera division — compact, capable, underrated
Fujica is the brand name under which Fuji Photo Film sold its consumer cameras, and it represents one of the great underdog stories in Japanese photography. While Nikon, Canon, and Pentax fought for headlines, Fujica quietly produced a series of 35mm SLRs with innovations that the bigger brands would not adopt for years. The ST series cameras are some of the best-kept secrets in vintage SLR photography.
| Founded | 1948 (camera division of Fuji Photo Film) |
| Founder/Origin | Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. |
| Headquarters | Tokyo, Japan |
| Models in Archive | 7 |
| Golden Era | 1970s |
| Known For | ST series SLRs, silicon metering cells, Fujinon EBC lenses |
History
Fuji Photo Film entered the camera market in the late 1940s under the Fujica brand name, initially producing simple rangefinder and viewfinder cameras for the Japanese domestic market. The company's real contribution to camera history, however, came in the 1970s with the ST series of 35mm SLRs. These cameras were designed with the same optical expertise that Fuji brought to its professional medium format cameras and its world-class film emulsions, resulting in instruments that consistently outperformed their price point.
The Fujica ST701, introduced in 1971, was a genuine milestone: the first 35mm SLR to use a silicon photodiode for light metering instead of the CdS (cadmium sulfide) cells used by every other manufacturer. Silicon metering responded faster to changing light, was more accurate in low light, and did not suffer from the "memory effect" that plagued CdS meters. This was a significant technical achievement that the rest of the industry would eventually adopt, but Fujica got there first. It was a pattern that would repeat throughout the ST series.
The ST series expanded through the 1970s with the ST801, ST901, ST605, and their variants, each offering a compelling combination of features, build quality, and optical excellence through Fuji's M42 screw-mount Fujinon lenses. These lenses, coated with Fuji's proprietary EBC (Electron Beam Coating) multi-coating technology, were among the finest optics available for the M42 mount, delivering color rendition and contrast that rivaled lenses costing two or three times as much. The Fujica system never achieved the market share of its Japanese competitors, partly because Fuji was always primarily a film company, but photographers who discovered these cameras recognized their exceptional value.
By the late 1970s, Fujica transitioned to a new bayonet mount with the AX series, but the magic of the ST system lingered. The Fujica brand was eventually retired as Fuji consolidated its camera operations, but the ST series cameras and their Fujinon lenses remain tremendously popular among film photographers who appreciate quality engineering at sensible prices.
Notable Cameras
Fujica ST701
The ST701 holds a permanent place in camera history as the first SLR with silicon metering. But beyond that milestone, it is simply a wonderful camera to shoot with. The body is compact and well-balanced, the shutter is smooth and quiet, and the viewfinder is bright enough to focus comfortably in dim light. Pair it with the Fujinon 55mm f/1.8 EBC lens, which is one of the sharpest standard lenses ever made for the M42 mount, and you have a combination that produces images of startling clarity and beautiful color. The ST701 routinely sells for a fraction of what comparable Nikons and Canons command, which is frankly absurd given its quality.
Fujica ST801
The ST801 expanded on the ST701's innovations with an LED viewfinder display, showing the selected shutter speed alongside the meter reading. This made the camera faster and more intuitive to use, particularly in rapidly changing light. The ST801 also featured a faster top shutter speed and improved mirror damping, making it Fujica's most capable manual-focus SLR. Photojournalists and documentary photographers who tried the ST801 were often converted, praising its reliability, its accurate metering, and the gorgeous rendering of its Fujinon EBC lenses.
Fujica ST605
The ST605 is the budget entry in the ST series, and it is a masterclass in how to make an affordable camera that does not feel cheap. Fujica stripped out the LED display and some of the ST801's refinements but kept the silicon metering cell and the excellent Fujinon lens mount. The result is a camera that beginners can learn on and experienced photographers can appreciate for its simplicity. The ST605 is arguably the best value in vintage Japanese SLRs, offering optical quality and metering accuracy that far exceed its modest price on the used market.
Compact
- DL-100 — A compact 35mm point-and-shoot camera with autofocus and motorized film advance, designed by Mario Bellini.
Medium Format
- GA645 (1995-) — A medium format film camera with autofocus and autoexposure, designed for 120/220 film in 6x4.5cm format.
- GL690 — A medium format rangefinder camera using 120 rollfilm, released in January 1974.
- GM670 — A medium format rangefinder camera producing 6×7 images on 120 film, released alongside the GL690.
- GS645S — A 6×4.5 format folding rangefinder camera with a 60mm wide-angle lens, designed for portability and medium format image quality.
- GW690 — Fujica GW690 Professional (1978) — 90mm f/3.5 medium format rangefinder. Heavy-duty metal body, 6x9cm film, known as the Texas Leica.
Slr
- AX-3 (1980-1985) — Step into the early 1980s, and the Fujica AX-3 emerges as Fujifilm’s confident answer to the rising tide of electronic SLRs. Not quite a beginner’s tool
- AX-5 (1980-1985) — It was Fujifilm’s first SLR to feature fully automatic Program AE (Auto Exposure) mode, combining advanced electronic.... Full specifications and review.
- ST605 (1976-1980) — The Fujica ST605 is a compact, entry-level 35mm film SLR camera introduced by Fujifilm in 1976. Designed for amateur photographers seeking an affordable
- ST605N (1978-1981) — Born in the golden era of analog photography, the Fujica ST605N arrived in 1978 as Fujifilm’s refined answer to the growing demand for dependable
- ST701 (1971-1975) — Designed as an affordable, lightweight SLR with reliable mechanical operation and built-in through-the-lens (TTL) cen.... Full specifications and review.
- ST801 (1973-1978) — It was among the first SLRs to feature a light-emitting diode (LED) display in the viewfinder, though not the first o.... Full specifications and review.
- ST901 (1974-1979) — The Fujica ST901 is a 35mm single-lens reflex (SLR) camera introduced by Fujifilm in 1974. It holds the distinction of being the first 35mm SLR from
Other Models
- Fujica — Vintage Camera — Explore 7 Fujica vintage camera models — specs, production history, reviews, and market values in the VTA archive.
- 35-ML — A 35mm rangefinder camera produced by Fuji Photo Film Co., introduced in 1958 as an updated version of the earlier Fujica 35-M.
- 35-SE — A 35mm rangefinder camera updated from the Fujica 35-ML, featuring shutter speed priority auto exposure and a built-in selenium meter.
- 8EE — A double 8mm cine film camera with triple-lens turret and variable frame speeds
- Auto-5 — A zone focus compact camera from Fujica, released in 1980, featuring fully automatic operation and built-in flash.
- AX-3 (1980-1985) — Step into the early 1980s, and the Fujica AX-3 emerges as Fujifilm’s confident answer to the rising tide of electronic SLRs. Not quite a beginner’s tool
- AX-5 (1980-1985) — It was Fujifilm’s first SLR to feature fully automatic Program AE (Auto Exposure) mode, combining advanced electronic.... Full specifications and review.
- AX100 — A compact Single-8 motion picture camera with interchangeable C-mount lenses, produced by Fujica for silent film capture.
- DL-100 — A compact 35mm point-and-shoot camera with autofocus and motorized film advance, designed by Mario Bellini.
- GA645 (1995-) — A medium format film camera with autofocus and autoexposure, designed for 120/220 film in 6x4.5cm format.
- GL690 — A medium format rangefinder camera using 120 rollfilm, released in January 1974.
- GM670 — A medium format rangefinder camera producing 6×7 images on 120 film, released alongside the GL690.
- GS645S — A 6×4.5 format folding rangefinder camera with a 60mm wide-angle lens, designed for portability and medium format image quality.
- GW690 — Fujica GW690 Professional (1978) — 90mm f/3.5 medium format rangefinder. Heavy-duty metal body, 6x9cm film, known as the Texas Leica.
- Single-8 — An instant load movie camera introduced by Fujica in early 1965, notable for its built-in pressure plate design.
- ST605 (1976-1980) — The Fujica ST605 is a compact, entry-level 35mm film SLR camera introduced by Fujifilm in 1976. Designed for amateur photographers seeking an affordable
- ST605 II — A compact 35mm SLR film camera with manual controls and TTL metering, produced exclusively for the Japanese market.
- ST605N (1978-1981) — Born in the golden era of analog photography, the Fujica ST605N arrived in 1978 as Fujifilm’s refined answer to the growing demand for dependable
- ST701 (1971-1975) — Designed as an affordable, lightweight SLR with reliable mechanical operation and built-in through-the-lens (TTL) cen.... Full specifications and review.
- ST705W — A fully manual 35mm SLR camera with through-the-lens metering, introduced in 1977 and built around the M42 screw lens mount.
- ST801 (1973-1978) — It was among the first SLRs to feature a light-emitting diode (LED) display in the viewfinder, though not the first o.... Full specifications and review.
- ST901 (1974-1979) — The Fujica ST901 is a 35mm single-lens reflex (SLR) camera introduced by Fujifilm in 1974. It holds the distinction of being the first 35mm SLR from
- stx1 — A 35mm SLR camera released in 1979, part of Fujica's X-mount line aimed at entry-level photographers.