Image
Category
Collection
Maker
Object type
Place
Material
Date

Koresco Daylight Enlarger and Copying Camera, c 1890

1885-1895

Kodak Reduction and Copying Camera

Possibly homemade copying camera - well constructed. For copying 16mm frame 2 1/4 x 3 1/4" negatives. Houghton-Butcher Watch Pocket Carbine back on rexine covered card tapering tube. Wray Lustrar lens F:1" f/3.5 No 21318. Clip for 16mm film; rotating opal diffuser; sliding shutter strip.

16mm copying camera

Copying camera; 1/2plate bellows camera; rack focusing on front and back; lens missing on tilting base for vertical use; with extension bed and light box; on Eastman Kodak Century Studio stand,

Half Plate Bellows Copying Camera

copying camera for making lantern slides on plates, 12 darkslides, in case. Rigid body with focusing screen and the other end has a focusing screen to whcih the lens is attached. Lens is a Triplet type without an iris diaphragm or shutter. Exposure regulated by turning the illumintion on and off. Metal construction, nickel plated.

Copying camera for making lantern slides on plates

1888

Lithotex copying camera for negatives up to 20 x 25 inch. Used for making copies or enlargments. Consists of two vertical frames mounted in a set of horizontal rials. WIth one focusing mount.Frame carries the lens panel, plate holder abd foocusing screen. Frames connected by a square bellows fitted with supports to stop it sagging when extended. Maximum extension is twice that of the focal length in the case of the Lithotex approx 50 inches. With worm and nut mechanis, Fitted with a Cooke Apochromatic Process lens 25 unch f.l. (635mm).

Lithotex copying camera for negatives up to 20 x 25 inch

Wooden box copying camera for 3 1/4 x 4 1/4 inch plates. Fitted with 15 meniscus lenses with sliding plate shutter. Very small apertures. Ground glass focusing screen. Continental tripod bush. Cabinet inside front lens panel. W. Butcher.

Royal Mail copying camera