1947 KIEV Production Line Photo
Printed from: USSRPhoto Forums
Topic URL: http://localhost:8088/modern/Forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=1277
Printed on: 5/8/2026 8:28:02 AM
Topic
Topic author: nightphoto
Posted on: 20090704000306
Replies
Reply author: Michel
Replied on: 20090704041929
Very interesting !
Thanks a lot, Bill, for sharing it with us.
Amitiés,
Michel.[:)]
Reply author: Jacques M.
Replied on: 20090704153013
Really very interesting!
Perhaps it would be convenient to make a parallel between TSVVS and these 1947 Kiev, both receiving genuine Zeiss lenses? Even if the lenses are not necessarily of the same years...
Amitiés. Jacques.
Reply author: Luiz Paracampo
Replied on: 20090704202452
Bill
Very very interesting picture.
As I could see, with a Zeiss experience since 1956, the lenses are for sure the Jena Tessar 2.8 50mm (5cm) in collapsible mount.
Thanks
LP
Reply author: nightphoto
Replied on: 20090704203308
Well, I think there are parallels between TSVVS and the early Kievs in some respects. I would strongly suspect that during the first five years (possibly even the first ten years) after the end of WWII, many technologies, equipment, personnel, and materials were brought from East Germany to the Soviet Union.
At this time it would seem that German lenses were state of the art and the Soviet lens technology and manufacturing were just beginning to reach a higher quality level and higher level of mass production. So as long as German lenses or the lens blocks were available, they were used by the Soviets.
However, I still suspect that it may be possible (and to my mind, quite honestly ... very probable) that the TSVVS was actually manufactured in Germany. I know there are other theories, but some of the details of the camera itself point to a German factory, maybe even at Zeiss Jena.
But this photo does show that even though there has been a lot of research done in the case of the "Contax to Kiev" story, not everything is known about what really happened. So, if just one photo of the 1947 initial Arsenal production line for Kievs shows this new and surprising information, what will other photos, documents, and actual cameras actually show?
I wonder if anyone has ever found a 1947 KIEV camera with a German Zeiss Tessar still in place? Were some released to the public with the German lenses, or were they replaced by the ZK lenses before release?
Regards, Bill
Reply author: Luiz Paracampo
Replied on: 20090704204416
Reply author: Luiz Paracampo
Replied on: 20090704204851
Note the photo paper is the Agfa Brovira from Wolfen before the ORWO foundation.
LP
Reply author: nightphoto
Replied on: 20090704211240
Luiz,
Thanks for the photos of the lenses. It looks like the same as in the 1947 photo. But, was this type of lens made in Jena also?
And ... your depth of knowledge of every product from the past is always amazing to me, so thank you! So when is the latest date this print can be made if made before ORWO?
Regards, Bill
Reply author: Luiz Paracampo
Replied on: 20090704214833
Hello Bill
You can see in the lens Jena N° 15XXXX Tessar 2.8 5cm
ORWO (ORiginal WOlfen) began officially in 1963
Regards
LP
Reply author: nathandayton
Replied on: 20090705094052
Bill, from the image it is difficult to tell. Are the cameras engraved Kiev and black filled? It is interesting that most of them do not have lenses. Speculation would be that not enough lenses were available!
Reply author: nightphoto
Replied on: 20090705111901
Reply author: Luiz Paracampo
Replied on: 20090705145407
Reply author: Jacques M.
Replied on: 20120820095035
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="MS Trebuchet, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by nightphoto</i>
I wonder if anyone has ever found a 1947 KIEV camera with a German Zeiss Tessar still in place? Were some released to the public with the German lenses, or were they replaced by the ZK lenses before release?
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></font id="quote"></blockquote id="quote">
Hi Bill!
Three years later...[:)] I had forgotten your thread, and I was interested by Jena Contaxes since...
It seems that the very early Kiev were all mounted with Zeiss lenses. ZK lenses would have appeared probably only during the year 1947. By my datas:
First, some Kiev prototypes with double serial number:
Contax II # 6066, Kiev # 470006: CZJ Sonnar # 3007088.
Contax II # 6070, Kiev # 470010: CZJ Tessar 3,5 # 3009343.
Contax II # 5908, Kiev # 470033: CZJ Sonnar.
Contax III # 5937, Kiev # 470019: CZJ Sonnar # 2852849.
Contax III # 18194, Kiev # 470025: CZJ Sonnar # 3092495.
Kievs with Arsenal number only:
Kiev II # 47058, CZJ Sonnar # 2710155.
Kiev II # 47074, CZJ Sonnar # 2853698.
Kiev III # 48096, CZJ Sonnar # 2845902.
And two late Jena Contax II (with Kiev engraving on the front, made in the fifties):
Kiev II # 30566, CZJ Sonnar 2852924.
Kiev II # 30575, CZJ Sonnar 3105581.
It seems interesting to note that lenses of two different batches (# 284xxxx or 285xxxx and 30xxxxx) were used at the same time.
Amitiés. Jacques.
Reply author: Elmar Lang
Replied on: 20120822163326
Hello,
just to add a further detail to this interesting discussion, I would like to inform that since nearly 20 years, I'm the happy owner of a 1947 Kiev camera. The body's serial number is 47367 and the lens is a collapsible "ZK 1:2 F=5 CM" with the prism maker's mark within "19" and "47" logo; serial no. "N000064" and red cyrillic "P". The body and the original everready case have a red painted number "2704".
I hope that these little info could be useful.
Best wishes,
E.L.
Reply author: Jacques M.
Replied on: 20120823050348
Thanks, Elmar! I have put it in my datas.
The first serial number I have for a ZK lens is 19-47/000034, mounted on the Kiev II # 47402. Concerning that matter, it seems there is no real order: the first 1947 Kievs did not necessarily receive the first ZK lenses.
It is always possible that Sonnars were first mounted and replaced as soon as possible by ZK before the cameras were released to the public...
Amitiés. Jacques.