Marchand Fischer Baby Camera

By Dan Cuny

Whenever my wife and I visit a foreign city, I check to see if the town or a surrounding city has a Flea Market to check out the local market of used and collectible cameras. This spring, my wife and I returned to Paris, which has a robust and large Flea Market area that thrives on the weekends.

The Flea Market, which comprises smallish stalls selling goods from carpets to antiques and almost anything imaginable, was a used camera store. It was not in the flea market but on one of the main roads surrounding the markets. Looking around the camera store, I noticed that the shop owner had many great cameras, but one that caught my eye was the Fischer Baby camera made by Marchand.

The Company
I don’t have much to say here, as I’ve searched the Internet and cannot find out much about this company. It’s most likely because they were a small French company in Charbonnieres, France, after WWII. They produced a minimal amount of toyish cameras in the 1950s that were sold in toy stores. Due to their build quality, which I’ll get into more when I explain the camera below, they were poorly received and, therefore, went out of business.

If you or anyone who reads this post knows anything about Marchand Co., which produced these cameras, I’d love to know, and I will update the blog post with that information.

The Camera
There are a few items that drew me to this Marchand Fischer Baby Camera. The faceplate is typical, but it does have a 6 on one side of the lens and 9 on the other. My first thought was that it was a fascinating film format. I’m a real enthusiast of anything panoramic, so this was the first light bulb in my head. Then, when I got closer to the camera and picked it up, the bulbous size and extremely light weight of the camera were pretty fascinating. It has almost a circular look and feel to the camera. Being someone who enjoys panoramic cameras and images, the 6×9 format made this very intriguing.

The camera is straightforward and similar to a Box-style camera but even simpler as there is no aperture setting and only two shutter speeds. The Fischer Baby has a very simple shutter with a bulb setting  “P” for time exposures and an “I” setting for instant. The camera’s shutter, at least on my camera, “clicks” when you press the shutter button down, which exposes the film, but it does the same thing when you pull the shutter button up to what most people would think it to be the starting position. The shutter speed is about 1/80th sec, and possibly even slower.

The Baby Fischer Camera is very round and bulbus in its design.
Side view of Fischer Baby Camera.
Back side of Fischer Baby camera.
Bottom view of Fischer Baby Camera.

Another fascinating point about the Marchand Fischer Baby Camera is how thin the plastic is. It doesn’t have a lot of “heft” to it, and it’s pretty light—the camera loads like any other simple point-and-shoot style camera from the late 1940s to mid-1950s. There’s a red window on the back of the camera so you know when you’re at the next frame to take a photo. The transport continues, but you can wind past the next frame if you’re not careful.

The Baby Fischer has no frills in its design. Two clips on the side of the Marchand Fischer Baby Camera keep the front of the camera attached to the back of the camera. There is no locking mechanism, and the clips could open easily, exposing the photos already taken. My camera is missing its strap because one of the eyelets has broken off, which is pretty standard due to its build quality.

This is one of the clips that hold the front and back together.
Inside view of Fischer Baby Camera.

The Results
My first impression was that this camera takes 120 film. When I went to load the film, the 120 roll was too big, so this must be a 620 film camera. Its re-spooling capability allows you to re-spool 120 films onto a 620 reel. I found an empty 620 film spool and a 120 roll of T-Max film, put them into my dark bag, and re-spooled the film.

I had never done this before, and when I took the film out of the dark bag, it looked OK. It was not professionally done, but it was my first time doing so. After loading the film into the Marchand Fischer Baby Camera, I took photos with my second spare 620 spool.

The results showed that my re-spooling could have been better. It was poor, as there was some light leakage from the end of the spool where the film wasn’t tight enough. Other than the light leaks, the results were pretty good.

My backyard
Light leaks from poor re-spooling 120 film onto a 620 spool.
Some vegetables in my garden

The Conclusion
After walking around my backyard and in front, I realized that the Marchand Fischer Baby Camera could have been better to work with. The viewfinder was challenging to look through and not precisely in its proportions. The winding was OK; you can see the film advance and frame numbers in the red window on the back. Since there wasn’t a strap on my camera, I had to carry it, which wasn’t uncomfortable, but I was always thinking about not dropping it. I’m glad I did a post on this camera and have already picked the camera for my next post, which will be on the Exakta 66 camera.

Thank you for reading this post. I appreciate your time. Until the next post, please be safe and well.

Share this post:

Find more similar content on 35mmc

Use the tags below to search for more posts on related topics:

Contribute to 35mmc for an ad-free experience.

There are two ways to contribute to 35mmc and experience it without the adverts:

Paid Subscription – £2.99 per month and you’ll never see an advert again! (Free 3-day trial).

Subscribe here.

Content contributor – become a part of the world’s biggest film and alternative photography community blog. All our Contributors have an ad-free experience for life.

Sign up here.

About The Author

By Dan Cuny
A little background on me, and my interest in anything photographic. I’ll begin to add posts on my collection, my interests, and items in my collection. I can still remember the day that my uncle gave me my first camera when I was 9 years old. It was a Univex twin lens camera and I was mesmerized looking down through the waist level finder. Everything was backward, but my brain quickly figured out left was right, and right was left. I took that camera on a vacation to Alaska shooting 620 film and still have the negatives and photos. Fast forward a few years to when I’m 16. I find myself in the front row at concerts like Traffic, Humble Pie, David Bowie, Led Zeppelin, Queen, and all the classic bands of the ’70s. My 3 friends and I went to see bands at least a couple times a month and where I first was published in Rolling Stone, Musician Magazine, Guitar Player, and other publications. In later years, we published a blog on the shows we saw and also have images on my website. I’m in the process of writing a book on my experiences and images from this time period. My passion for all things cameras and photographic started when I turned 18 and started working at the local camera store. Having worked there for almost 20 years, I sold all the classic cameras of the 1970s and ’80s like Canon AE-1, Nikon F, Minolta SRT, Pentax Spotmatic, Topcon Super D, and many large and medium format cameras. To this day, I can tell these camera cameras even from the outline they have. This is where I started to collect anything photographic, but the true passion is for cameras and lenses. I’ve had a great career in the photo industry which has lead in many different directions, from Professional Photo Lab Manager to PrePress and high-end scanner sales to repping for Sinar and Broncolor, to Leaf Digital back representative, and onto the most recent where I was the Profoto Rep for the US, West Coast for almost 15 years. During these times, I’ve had the opportunity to travel where I always found some time to seek out cameras or photo items in the town I’ve traveled to. I’ve also had the opportunity to meet and work with some fascinating photographers over my career. From Mary Ellen Mark, Jim Marshall, Dan Winters, Annie Leibovitz, and many, many others.
View Profile

Comments

Thomas Eckered on Marchand Fischer Baby Camera

Comment posted: 04/10/2024

Dear Dan,
If you search the French google you will find a little more information: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marchand_(photographie)
Best regards,
Thomas Eckered
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Dan Cuny replied:

Comment posted: 04/10/2024

Hello Thomas, Thank you for that information. I always appreciate when people find info it's been difficult for me to find. Regards, Dan

Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Eric Norris on Marchand Fischer Baby Camera

Comment posted: 04/10/2024

Paris' flea markets are very fun. I have an Agfa Optima Parat half frame camera (still works quite well!) that I found at an outdoor market as my friends and I were exploring the city in 2019. When I shoot with it today, it brings back memories of floating down the Seine and taking pictures of the Eiffel Tower.
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Dan Cuny replied:

Comment posted: 04/10/2024

Hello Eric, Thank you for your comment. That Agfa camera will always hold a special memory in your heart and collection. Regards, Dan

Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Gary Smith on Marchand Fischer Baby Camera

Comment posted: 04/10/2024

Your baby seems to take reasonable photographs. The Marchand company apparently attempted to enter the market following the war. There were two models dating from 1948: the Fisher Baby and the Flash. Both produced 6 x 9 negatives from 120 roll film. While the Baby omitted flash capability, the flash on the Flash model wasn't synchronized. Both models originally had the same designation until the Baby was renamed to avoid confusion stemming from a flashless model with flash in the name. Both are rare. All of this extracted from the McKeown's 12th Edition Price Guide to Antique and Classic Cameras which I wrote about here: https://www.35mmc.com/02/04/2024/mckeowns-price-guide-to-antique-and-classic-cameras-catalogues-histories-and-price-guides/
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Dan Cuny replied:

Comment posted: 04/10/2024

Hello Gary, Thank you for that information, and I'm happy to own one of these rare beasts, although it is a very wide camera to hold. I do like the simplicity and the images are OK. Regards, Dan

Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Tony Warren on Marchand Fischer Baby Camera

Comment posted: 04/10/2024

Hi Dan, I found the camera in McKeons like Gary. To quote - "A small manufacturer who attempted to enter the camera business after the war..". Very much on the lines of the Agfa Click/Clack with a curved film path to avoid fall-off with the simple meniscus lens they usually used. Your vegetables shot demonstrates this well with the wire mesh rendered well across the frame in the main plane of focus.
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scott Gitlin on Marchand Fischer Baby Camera

Comment posted: 06/10/2024

Hello Dan. The shutter action you describe is the same as found in the early Kodak Brownie box cameras. Perhaps there is way to clean the lens -front no problem but the rear . . . perhaps in bulb mode you could get an alcohol swab in there?
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Dan Cuny replied:

Comment posted: 06/10/2024

Hello Scott, The next time I put film through the camera, I'll try and clean the inside of the lens too.

Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Paul Quellin on Marchand Fischer Baby Camera

Comment posted: 08/10/2024

Great article, finding unlikely looking old cameras and trying to get results from them has to be one of the finest pastimes. I find great reward in getting modest pictures from something that came from the bottom of a box in junk shop, or was included in a box of other stuff at an auction. One or two I have picked up have actually turned out to be overlooked gems. Even if they aren't though, they're always good on a shelf.
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *