Difference between revisions of "Bender Photographic"
(→Notes) |
Hanskerensky (talk | contribs) m (Redirected Link URL to archived version) |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
|image_rights= with permission | |image_rights= with permission | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | '''Bender Photographic''' was a maker of [[view camera]]s based in Leavenworth, Washington. Until 2008 it made camera kits for [[large format]] cameras. According to an archive of the earlier company website<ref>[http://www.jaybender.com/BPH/ Bender Photographic] at [http://www.jaybender.com/main.htm JayBender.com]</ref>, its proprietor Jay Bender has retired from building view camera kits after 30 years, due to declining use of film cameras. | + | '''Bender Photographic''' was a maker of [[view camera]]s based in Leavenworth, Washington. Until 2008 it made camera kits for [[large format]] cameras. According to an archive of the earlier company website<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20120309113018/http://www.jaybender.com/BPH/ Bender Photographic] (archived) at [http://www.jaybender.com/main.htm JayBender.com]</ref>, its proprietor Jay Bender has retired from building view camera kits after 30 years, due to declining use of film cameras. |
Bender also sold [[pinhole camera|pinholes]] precision-drilled in brass shim stock for makers of [[homemade pinhole camera]]s<REF>"Pinhole Pointers," January 1988 Popular Photography (Vol. 95, No. 1; footnote, pg. 53).</REF>. | Bender also sold [[pinhole camera|pinholes]] precision-drilled in brass shim stock for makers of [[homemade pinhole camera]]s<REF>"Pinhole Pointers," January 1988 Popular Photography (Vol. 95, No. 1; footnote, pg. 53).</REF>. |
Revision as of 11:38, 6 November 2018
Bender 4×5 view camera image by MBat (Image rights) |
Bender Photographic was a maker of view cameras based in Leavenworth, Washington. Until 2008 it made camera kits for large format cameras. According to an archive of the earlier company website[1], its proprietor Jay Bender has retired from building view camera kits after 30 years, due to declining use of film cameras.
Bender also sold pinholes precision-drilled in brass shim stock for makers of homemade pinhole cameras[2].
Cameras
pinhole camera kits
- 4x5 Pinhole Camera
monorail camera kits
Notes
- ↑ Bender Photographic (archived) at JayBender.com
- ↑ "Pinhole Pointers," January 1988 Popular Photography (Vol. 95, No. 1; footnote, pg. 53).