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Overview | |
---|---|
Maker | Ricoh |
Type | 35mm compact |
Released | October 1996 |
Lens | |
Lens mount | fixed |
Lens | 28mm f/2.8 or 21mm f/3.5 |
Sensor/medium | |
Sensor type | film |
Sensor size | 36×24 mm |
Film format | 35mm |
General | |
Body features | magnesium or aluminum alloy |
Made in | Japan |
Chronology | |
Successor | Ricoh GR Digital |
The Ricoh GR was a series of point-and-shoot, or compact, 35 mm film cameras made by Ricoh and introduced between 1996 and 2001. Specific camera models include the GR1, GR10, GR1s, GR1v, and GR21. The GR name was later used for Ricoh's GR series of digital cameras, which began production in 2005.
The cameras had a very high quality[1] 1:2.8 28 mm lens. Exposure control could be program automatic or aperture priority semi-automatic. They had a built-in flash and date imprinting versions were also available.
Because the diameter of a 135 film cartridge is 25 mm (0.98 in), most cameras were limited to a minimum thickness of 30 mm (1.2 in). Ricoh released the R1 in 1994, claiming it to be the world's thinnest camera; the camera has a distinctive grip section for the photographer's right hand which accommodates the film cartridge, but the remainder of the body is thinned down to improve portability.[2] The R1 has a 30 mm f/3.5 lens with four elements in four groups and a panorama crop function;[3] the body is made of aluminum, with a plastic rear door.[4]
Although the R1 was commercially successful, professional photographers requested a camera with more manual controls, and Ricoh responded with the GR1. Compared to the R1, the GR1 uses a similar viewfinder but is fitted with a magnesium alloy body and a 28 mm f/2.8 lens which Ricoh claimed to perform better than equivalent lenses for single lens reflex cameras.[5] The GR1 first was released in late 1996[6] and received the 1997 TIPA award for best 35 mm Compact Camera.[7] As an operational quirk, the GR1 shoots backwards: when the cartridge is loaded initially, the camera winds the film all the way out, which takes approximately 30 seconds;[8] as exposures are taken, the film is wound back into the cartridge.[9] With its lightweight body, the GR1 had a weight and volume smaller than many 28 mm lenses for SLRs. British conflict photographer Philip Jones Griffiths owned and used a GR1.
Ricoh released a limited production run of the 28 mm GR lens in 1997, limited to 3000 copies, as a manually-focused lens with a M39 lens mount; the GR lens is nearly symmetric, featuring a concave front surface and seven-element, four-group construction.[10] In 1998, a simplified version (GR10) and update (GR1s) were added to the line. Both shared the same 28 mm lens as GR1. The GR10 was fitted with an aluminum body and the aperture-priority autoexposure mode was removed.[11] The GR1s had improved lens coatings for better flare resistance and other minor feature updates.[12] Ricoh also released a 21 mm GR lens in 1999 as another limited production optic (1700 in total) with M39 mount; this was a nine-element, six-group lens which also had a nearly-symmetric design, and was almost as compact as the 28 mm lens.[10]
The final two models came out in 2001: the GR21, with the wide 21 mm lens, and the GR1v, another incremental improvement on the GR1s. The GR21 won the 2001 TIPA Award for Best 35MM Prestige Camera.[7] The GR1v adds fixed-focus distance settings (branded SNAP focus) and manual ISO selection.[12] Japanese street photographer Daido Moriyama is known to have used the GR1v.[13]
The film GR cameras were discontinued after the introduction of the Ricoh GR Digital in 2005; over time, the most common faults that have developed have affected the status LCD on the top deck, the motor, and the light seals, particularly around the film information window on the rear door.[9][12] In 2014, Ricoh discontinued service for the film GR cameras. The GR21 was made in limited numbers and tends to be more expensive than the others.[12]
Name | Image | Rel. | Lens | Dimensions | Shutter speed (sec.) | Exposure modes | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
F.L. | Max. aperture | Constr. | W | H | D | D (grip) | Wgt. | |||||
GR1[14] | Oct 1996 | 28 mm | f/2.8 | 7e/4g | 117 mm (4.6 in) | 61 mm (2.4 in) | 26.5 mm (1.0 in) | 34 mm (1.3 in) | 175–177 g (6.2–6.2 oz) | 2–1⁄500 | P,A (ISO 25–3200) | |
GR10[15] | Apr 1998 | 118 mm (4.6 in) | 61 mm (2.4 in) | 35 mm (1.4 in) | 170 g (6.0 oz) | P (ISO 50–3200) | ||||||
GR1s[16] | 117 mm (4.6 in) | 61 mm (2.4 in) | 34 mm (1.3 in) | 178–180 g (6.3–6.3 oz) | P,A (ISO 25–3200) | |||||||
GR21[17] | Apr 2001 | 21 mm | f/3.5 | 9e/6g | 64 mm (2.5 in) | 38.5 mm (1.5 in) | 200 g (7.1 oz) | |||||
GR1v[18] | Sep 2001 | 28 mm | f/2.8 | 7e/4g | 61 mm (2.4 in) | 34 mm (1.3 in) | 178–180 g (6.3–6.3 oz) |
Ricoh's GR1 series has its devotees. ... its lens has received nothing but praise in terms of its optical qualities