Pekka Buttler, 01/2025
Quick summary
Rodenstock is a German optics company with a very long tradition. The company started in 1887 with the manufacture of eyeglass lenses, later diversifying into camera lenses, cameras, and various other lenses. Today Rodenstock is again a pure eyeglass (and eyeglass lens) manufacturer.
Rodenstock is interesting to the photographer wanting to combine legacy lenses with modern cameras especially due to the interchangeable lenses that Rodenstock manufactured throughout the middle of the century.
History of Rodenstock
Rodenstock GmbH was founded in 1877 by Josef Rodenstock in Würzburg, Germany. Like many companies in its era it began as a general manufacturers of precision instruments (including barometers and various other measuring instruments) before increasingly focusing on optics. By 1883, the company had relocated to Munich. Under Josef’s leadership, Rodenstock developed and patented innovative products and gained a name as a premier manufacturer of eyeglasses and seeing-aids. In the early 20th century Rodenstock started combining its capabilities in optics with its precision manufacturing background and started manufacturing cameras and selling lenses for other camera makers.
In the 1920s, Rodenstock shifted focus to mass-producing camera lenses for major manufacturers, ceasing its own camera production to meet the high demand. During World War II, the company manufactured binoculars and optical prisms for tanks, while continuing the production of eyeglasses, deemed essential for military purposes. Post-war, Rodenstock returned to its core competencies in photographic and ophthalmic lenses and frames.
The 1950s marked a period of significant growth under the leadership of Rolf Rodenstock, Josef’s grandson. The company increased its investment in public advertising, restarted its camera lens manufacture and expanded its product range to include projection lenses for slide projectors. While Rodenstock optics (whether for prosumer cameras or large format cameras) had a fearsome reputation, this alone could not compensate for the increasingly unfavourable competitive position of the german optics industry. By the end of the 1970s, Rodenstock was fast withdrawing from the manufacture of small and medium format lens manufacture.
In 1996, Rodenstock spun off its precision optics division, including the production of lenses for analog view cameras and digital view cameras with high-resolution digital backs, into a new company, Rodenstock Photo Optics. This division was acquired by Göttingen-based Linos Photonics AG in 2000, marking Rodenstock’s exit from the photographic lens manufacturing business.
Today, Rodenstock GmbH focuses on the development, production, and distribution of ophthalmic lenses and frames, as well as sunglasses, sports eyewear, and specialised products like reading and computer glasses.
Rodenstock lens names:
Alike most German companies, Rodenstock had the habit of giving its lenses names that echoed the lens’ design or use-case. Some of the typical Rodenstock lens names are:.
• Eurygon (wide-angle lenses for 35 mm format, 2nd generation retrofocus)
• Grandagon (symmetric wide-angle lenses for large format)
• Ysarex (Tessar-type lenses, 35 mm format to large format)
• Heligon (fast, standard lenses, double-Gauss design, 35 mm format)
• Sironar-N (symmetric, standard lens for large format)
• Rotelar (short and medium tele lenses, 35 mm format)
• Yronar (medium tele lenses, 35 mm format)
• Apo-Ronar (narrow-angle lens for large format, specialised for repro and product photography)
• Imagon (specialist portrait lens)1
• Rodagon (enlarger lenses)
Rodenstock serial numbers
Rodenstock is one of those companies that throughout its life used a running serial numbering scheme, hence facilitating easy dating of lenses. The data summarised here is based on an online document published in 2009 by Linos. The document has since been taken down2.
Production Year | Serial # up to | Rough annual production3 | Production Year | Serial # up to | Rough annual production | Production Year | Serial # up to | Rough annual production |
1910 | 50 000 | N/A | 1969 | 6 500 000 | 200 000 | 1994 | 11 231 713 | 56 000 |
1920 | 200 000 | 15 000 | 1971 | 7 000 000 | 200 000 | 1995 | 11 294 073 | 57 000 |
1930 | 400 000 | 20 000 | 1972 | 7 500 000 | 250 000 | 1996 | 11 358 165 | 72 000 |
1935 | 700 000 | 60 000 | 1973 | 8 000 000 | 375 000 | 1997 | 11 407 513 | 64 000 |
1938 | 900 000 | 62 000 | 1974 | 9 000 000 | 500 000 | 1998 | 11 468 541 | 64 000 |
1940 | 950 000 | 50 000 | 1976 | 9 300 000 | 460 000 | 1999 | 11 521 123 | 58 000 |
1945 | 2 000 000 | 210 000 | 1977 | 9 500 000 | 400 000 | 2000 | 11 588 264 | 59 000 |
1952 | 2 500 000 | 71 000 | 1979 | 10 000 000 | 200 000 | 2001 | 11 649 679 | 58 000 |
1954 | 3 000 000 | 111 000 | 1981 | 10 300 000 | 200 000 | 2002 | 11 678 274 | 54 000 |
1957 | 4 000 000 | 300 000 | 1984 | 10 500 000 | 100 000 | 2003 | 11 724 136 | 51 000 |
1960 | 4 500 000 | 250 000 | 1986 | 10 750 000 | 90 000 | 2004 | 11 767 376 | 49 000 |
1961 | 5 000 000 | 286 000 | 1989 | 10 950 000 | 90 000 | 2005 | 11 805 455 | 43 000 |
1963 | 5 300 000 | 217 000 | 1991 | 11 000 000 | 50 000 | 2006 | 11 860 241 | 42 000 |
1966 | 6 000 000 | 200 000 | 1993 | 11 150 000 | 50 000 | 2007 | 11 926 199 | 50 000 |
2008 | 11 944 338 | 44 000 |
Footnotes
- The Imagon is specialist lens designed specifically for portraiture. The lens lacks many of the elements one would consider essential to a interchangeable lens: It does not have a focusing mechanism (use a helicoid or a view camera), and it does not have an adjustable aperture (instead it uses interchangeable diffusion disks). The lens is one of the classic professional soft-focus “portrait lenses”. ↩︎
- But can still be found on the Wayback machine here. While the document explicitly says that the serial numbers were used only on “Rodenstock lenses” the jump in production figures during WW2 would indicate that any multi-element system (whether photographic lens or binocular) was given a serial number from the same series. ↩︎
- Calculated from data in the table using a running average of a minimum of 5 years. Rounded to the nearest thousand ↩︎