- 2005.005.9.013
- Unidad documental simple
- [manufactured ca. 1900]
Item is a wooden sterocard viewer, with a stereocard of the Grand Colonnade, Naples, Italy.
Item is a wooden sterocard viewer, with a stereocard of the Grand Colonnade, Naples, Italy.
Item is a handheld view master manufactured by Sawyers Inc and first introduced at the New York World Fair (1939-1940). Item is made of plastic and metal. The lever on the side of the viewer will rotate the reel one frame at a time once pressed. Reels are interchangeable and come with a variety of themes.
Item is a viewer made from Bakelite that allows the viewing of stereo transparencies. Stereo transparency included.
Parte deHeritage Camera Collection
Item is a 35mm stereo camera with CdS metering. Manual or automatic exposure. 24 x 29mm images. Industar-81 F2.8/38mm lenses. Comes with leather pouch, sun shades, small parts, and hard plastic case.
Parte deHeritage Camera Collection
Item is a stereo camera produced in the early 1950's when the format became widely popular with amateur photographers. The camera uses 35mm film, has 2 anastigmat lenses, 3.5/35mm with a shutter speed of 1-1/150. The camera has a flash synch on the top.
Parte deHeritage Camera Collection
Item is a stereo camera for creating two 24 x 24 mm exposures on standard 35mm cartridge film. The camera has a built in sprit level to ensure that ideal stereo effect is achieved. Kodak produced a corresponding Kodaslide Stereo Viewer and proprietary stereo slide holders for viewing images shot with the camera. Lenses are Kodak Anaston F3.5/35mm with a Kodak Flash 200 shutter.
Parte deHeritage Camera Collection
Item is a four-lens, three-dimensional camera developed by Jerry Curtis Nims and Allen Kwok Wah Lo and manufactured in the UK. The camera has a plastic body and 4 identical lenses, coupled with a shutter that exposes the four square images in synch. When exposed, 35mm film was sent to the Nimslo Co. in England and a few other specialty labs. The customer received developed, autostereo (lenticular) colour prints, which allow a true stereo image without the use of glasses. This process was also developed by Nims and Lo.
Parte deHeritage Camera Collection
Item is a small, plastic novelty camera that shoots four consecutive photos on one frame of 35 mm film. The rotating shutter exposes them in sequence, at intervals of about 0.22 sec.The result is four images on a single negative that show the movement of a subject in phases. The process uses the same concepts as the stop-motion animation used by Eadweard Muybridge in his Animal Locomotion series of the late 1800's. The camera is a very simple design and has no focusing or aperture control and a simple sports style viewfinder. The shutters are fixed at 1/100 of a second.
Parte deHeritage Camera Collection
Item is a four-lens, three-dimensional camera, originally developed by the Nimslo company, the Nishika copies were created after Nimslo was taken over by Nishika in 1989. The camera has a plastic body and 4 identical lenses, a fixed 1/60th shutter that exposes the four square images in synch. When exposed, the 35mm film had to be sent to specialty labs equipped for autostereo (lenticular) colour printing, which produced a true stereo image without the use of glasses. This process was also developed by Nims and Lo, of the original company.
Parte deHeritage Camera Collection
Item is a hand-made stereo camera created by attaching two instamatic cameras together (a Kodak X-15 and a Kodak X-15F).
Parte deHeritage Camera Collection
Item is a brown Kodak Stereo Camera for two 23 x 24 mm exposures on standard 35mm cartridge film. The camera had a built in sprit level to ensure ideal stereo effect was achieved. Kodak produced a corresponding Kodaslide Stereo Viewer and proprietary stereo slide holders for images shot with this camera. Lenses are Kodak Anaston F3.5/35mm with a Kodak Flash 200 shutter. The viewfinder is between the two lenses.
Parte deHeritage Camera Collection
Item is an inexpensive plastic "3-D" stereo camera made by the Coronet Camera Company. The camera has a binocular viewfinder for 4 stereo pairs or 8 single exposures and uses 127 film for 4.5 x 5 cm exposures, featuring a single speed shutter, 1/50, and a twin f11 meniscus fixed-focus lenses.
Kodak promotional lenticular print
Parte deFormer Kodak employee donations
Item is a print made with the lenticular process, allowing 2 separate images (a diver and a snow boarder) to be seen on one surface, based on the angle the object is viewed from.
Kodak Canada Inc.
Keystone View Company stereograph
Keystone View Company
File contains photographic stereocards depicting Italian architectural sites by Carlo Ponte and Carlo Naya, including St. Peters (Rome), the entrance to the Grand Canal (Venice), Metropolitan Cathedral-Basilica of the Nativity of Saint Mary (Milan), the Porta Magna Arsenal (Venice), PIazza San Marco (Venice), the Giants Staircase of the Doges Palace (Venice), the Roman Amphitheater (Verona). Some stereocards published under the name "C. Naya Venise".
C. P. Venezia
London Stereoscopic Company steteographs of America
File contains photographic stereocards depicting views of New York state, including Trenton Falls, the Catskill Mountains, and West Point, as well as views of the UK including Alton Towers and Furness Abbey.
W. England
Stereographs in this series were photographed by James M. Davis, and published by B.W. Kilburn, Littleton, New Hampshire.
Davis, James M.
File contains photographic stereocards depicting views of Springfield, MA.
Buchholz, Herman
Underwood and Underwood stereocard
File contains a photographic stereocard depicting a photographer taking a photograph above New York City.
Carter, C.W.
File contains photographic postcards depicting stereographic images.
Item is a photographic stereocard depicting a view of the Cliff House in San Fransicso.
Picturesque Views of all Countries
Item is a photomechanical reproduction stereocard Richard Barry and Frederik Villiers. This image is from a series of Russo-Japan war stereocards.
T. W. Ingersoll
Item is a photographic stereocard of Villa Serbelloni.
Genazzini, G.
Item is a photographic stereocard of a statue in a garden. The albumen prints have been handcoloured.
H. Negretti & Zambra
Stereocards from unknown makers
File contains a photographic and photomechanical reproductioon stereocards produced by unknown creators, including a double-sided homemade card.
Item is a photomechanical reproductioon stereocard produced as a giveaway by the American Cereal Co. The cards were included in the packaging of Pettijohn's Breakfast Food cereal. The company was also giving away stere-viewers when consumers sent in a cut out from the packaging along with 50 cents.
The American Cereal Co.
J.F. Jarvis Publishers stereographs
Jarvis, John F.
Universal Photo Art Company stereographs
Universal Photo Art Company
Beardsley, H.N.
File consists of 7 reels of View-Master slides, in 3 sets:
Apollo Moon Landing
7 More Wonders of the World
Bible Heroes
Half frame stereo slide mounts
Item consists of 2 packages of paper mounts for half-frame stereo slides. Product #4716, Fits Nimslo and other half-frame 3-D formats.
Reel 3-D Enterprises
File contains a photographic stereocard depicting Salk Lake City, Utah.
Carter, C.W.
Asahi Pentax Stereo Adapter Set
Item is a black metal device used to convert regular 35mm SLR cameras to stereo cameras by fitting a mirrored splitter onto the lens. The set comes with a viewer for the resulting 35mm slide photographs.