Difference between revisions of "Box camera"

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'''Box cameras''' are a class of mainly 19th century [[camera types]].
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'''Box cameras''' are the earliest class of [[camera types]], originating in the 19th Century; later evolving into simple [[rollfilm]] models which remained popular as cameras for beginners until the 1960s.
  
===history===
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==History==
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{{Flickr image
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| image_source=http://www.flickr.com/photos/89864432@N00/2619416880/in/pool-camerapedia/
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| image=http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3160/2619416880_4df07e26a3_m.jpg
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| image_align=right
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| image_text=reconstruction of Niépce's<br/>experimental camera, small variant
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}}
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The box cameras are the oldest class of [[photography|photographic]] cameras. The first camera ever used for making persistent photographic images was the big wooden box camera that [[Nicéphore Niépce]] used for experimental photography in the mid-1820s. When [[Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre]] joined his developments of new photographic processes they already used box cameras with iris [[diaphragm]]. Daguerre gave Niépce such a camera. Concerning lenses they had different preferences, Daguerre liked the color corrected (achromatic) version of the periscopic lens of optician-engineer Dr. Wollaston, Niépce sought the help of the opticians Vincent and Charles Chevalier. Some years later [[William Henry Fox Talbot]] made his photographic experiments. He had a whole series of little box cameras ("mousetraps") to be able to make several exposures on one sunny day - exposure times were very long in those pioneering days. The box design of all these pioneer cameras was derived from a certain variant of the [[camera obscura]].
 +
 
 +
When Daguerre could present a photographic process with acceptable exposure times in 1839 he made plans for a very heavy wooden box camera that became the model for many early photographic cameras: A box with an open back, and a hole in the middle of the front to mount a lens or a diaphragm and a lens. Shutters were not needed, the lens cap was sufficient. A second box, one with open front side, held in its back the light sensitive plate in its holder, or the focusing [[ground glass]] instead. The second box had to be pushed like a drawer into the outer box. Focusing was made with open lens, wide aperture and ground glass in the back by shifting the inner box for- or backward until the image subject appeared sharply on the screen. Since the sliding drawer should not hang in its position the bottom plate of the outer box was of double length so that the inner box was always moved on this plane. [[Alphonse Giroux]] was the maker of the biggest series of Daguerre's original camera "[[Le Daguerreotype]]", some made of fine walnut wood. He used achromatic lenses of the optician [[Charles Chevalier]]. Optician Bianchi produced a similar camera, probably with own lenses but the woodwork done by the same craftsmen that made Giroux's cameras. It's supposed that the Susse brothers made a small series of "Le Daguerreotype" too. In 2007 such a camera appeared for the first time in a [[photographica]] auction. 168 years after the production of the original camera the successful bidder must have a strong belief in its authenticity. Other early makers of sliding box cameras for the daguerreotype or the talbotype process were Gaudin & Lerebours (F), James Ottevill (GB) and John Roberts (USA) as well as many unknown craftsmen of the 1840s.
  
The box cameras are the oldest class of [[photography|photographic]] cameras. The first camera ever used for making persistent photographic images was the big wooden box camera that [[Nicéphore Niépce]] used for experimental photography in the mid-1820s. When [[Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre]] joined his developments of new photographic processes they already used box cameras with iris [[diaphragm]]. Daguerre gave Niépce such a camera. Concerning lenses they had different preferences, Daguerre liked the color corrected (achromatic) version of the periscopic lens of optician-engineer Dr. Wollaston, Niépce sought the help of the opticians Vincent and Charles Chevalier. Some years later [[William Henry Fox Talbot]] made his photographic experiments. He had a whole series of little box cameras ("mousetraps") to be able to make several exposures on one sunny day - exposure times were very long in those pioneering days. The box design of all these pioneer cameras was derived from a certain variant of the [[camera obscura]].
+
====Boxes as a Means to Popularize Photography====
  
When Daguerre could present a photographic process with acceptable exposure times in 1839 he made plans for a very heavy wooden box camera that became the model for many early photographic cameras: A box with an open back, and a hole in the middle of the front to mount a lens or a diaphragm and a lens. Shutters were not needed, the lens cap was sufficient. A second box, one with open front side, held in its back the light sensitive plate in its holder, or the focusing ground glass instead. The second box had to be pushed like a drawer into the outer box. Focusing was made with open lens, wide aperture and ground glass in the back by shifting the inner box for- or backward until the image subject appeared sharply on the screen. Since the sliding drawer should not hang in its position the bottom plate of the outer box was of double length so that the inner box was always moved on this plane. [[Alphonse Giroux]] was the maker of the biggest series of Daguerre's original camera "[[Le Daguerreotype]]", some made of fine walnut wood. He used achromatic lenses of the optician Charles Chevalier. Optician Bianchi produced a similar camera, probably with own lenses but the woodwork done by the same craftsmen that made Giroux's cameras. It's supposed that the Susse brothers made a small series of "Le Daguerreotype" too. In 2007 such a camera appeared for the first time in a [[photographica]] auction. 168 years after the production of the original camera the successful bidder must have a strong belief in its authenticity. Other early makers of sliding box cameras for the daguerreotype or the talbotype process were Gaudin & Lerebours (F), James Ottevill (GB) and John Roberts (USA) as well as many unknown craftsmen of the 1840s.
+
Even at the beginning, amateurs participated in the photography business, at least as customers for photographic material. But traveling was expensive, and camera equipment was heavy, so that a camera was not in the luggage of even many rich travelers. But by the end of the 19th century, circumstances were changing. Dry plates, roll film, drugstores with darkrooms to rent, material and infrastructure were emerging to support a spreading of amateur photography. And traveling was becoming easy and affordable since the railway networks reached a high density and trains were much faster.
  
====boxes as a means to popularize photography====
+
The industry had to invent easy-to-use cameras for all the new potential camera buyers. Box cameras were one key product in that market. They contained a simple camera technology, the best for mass production. And they offered the convenience of making a whole series of photos without reloading. In 1888 the [[Kodak No. 1]] with built-in 100-exposure paper film roll was only the first of many rollfilm box cameras that appeared on the market. With clever marketing and advertising the cameras found more and more customers.  But the film plates and sheet film got a chance on that market through another type of box camera, the [[magazine camera]]. The related camera makers used their cleverness for several ingenious plate change mechanisms. The magazine box cameras eventually vanished by the 1920s.
  
From the beginning amateurs were participating in the photography business, at least as customers for photographic material. But traveling was expensive, and camera equipment was heavy, so that a camera was even not in the luggage of many rich travelers. Circumstances had changed at the end of the 19th century. Dry plates, roll film, drugstores with darkrooms to rent, material and infrastructure were given to support a wider spreading of amateur photography. And traveling was easy and affordable since the railway networks reached a high density and trains were much faster.
+
====Boxes for Beginners====
 +
In 1896 [[Zar]] made the first very cheap entry-level box camera. In 1900, a [[Yale]] plate box camera cost just $2, including complete developing/printing/toning kit. The box cameras for single film plates were soon eclipsed by Kodak's 1900 introduction a $1 box camera for roll film, the first [[Brownie]]. This concept of an affordable, simple camera was what brought photography to a mass market. Another new marketing theme arose when the international boy scout movement was launched. Many Camera makers then offered "Scout" models: [[Seneca]], [[Pho-Tak]], [[Kodak]], [[Lumière]], [[Imperial]]. When Kodak celebrated its 50th jubilee it even gave away box cameras as a gift to 550.000 American pupils of a certain age. In Germany [[Agfa]] launched a campaign in the 1930s. People could buy an [[Agfa Box 44]] camera for 4 Marks, below the production price. Agfa regained the lost money by film sales.
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{{Flickr image
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| image_source=http://www.flickr.com/photos/89864432@N00/4219102274/in/pool-camerapedia
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| image=http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4067/4219102274_62bcbbc317.jpg
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| image_align=left
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| image_text=Typical [[rollfilm]] box cameras of [[USA|American]], [[France|French]] and [[Great Britain|British]] makers
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}}{{br}}
  
The industry had to offer easy-to-use cameras to all the camera newbies. Box cameras were one key product in that market. They contained a simple camera technology, the best for mass production. And they offered the convenience of making a whole series of photos without reloading. In 1888 the [[Kodak No. 1]] with built-in 100-exposure paper film roll was only one of many rollfilm box cameras that appeared on the market. With clever marketing and advertising the cameras found more and more customers. But the film plates and sheet film got a chance on that market through another type of box camera, the [[magazine camera]]. The related camera makers used their cleverness for several ingenious plate change mechanisms.
+
==Midcentury: The Box Camera Evolves==
 +
{{Flickr_image
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|image_source= http://www.flickr.com/photos/heritagefutures/3240310727/in/pool-camerawiki
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|image= http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3267/3240310727_92f1728b40_m.jpg
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|image_align= right
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|image_text= 1946 type Ensign Ful-Vue
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|image_by= Dirk HR Spennemann
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|image_rights= with permission
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}}
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The 1946 redesign of the [[Ensign Ful-Vue]] was a new approach to box camera design, handsome and with a very big viewfinder. New developments in plastics molding, such as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakelite bakelite], meant manufacturers were no longer limited to the old cubical box shapes. In fact, fanciful styling could help add eye appeal in what was becoming a mass consumer product. The term "Box Camera" was evolving, and by the 1950s meant any simple, rigid-bodied amateur camera lacking much in the way of exposure or focus adjustments.<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=wt0DAAAAMBAJ&lpg=PA126&dq=%22Ansco%20Viking%22&pg=PA126#v=onepage&q=%22Box%20Camera%22&f=false "What Kind of Camera for You?"] in ''Popular Mechanics'' magazine (USA), February 1955; at [http://books.google.com/books Google Books]</ref>. But box cameras continued their role as approachable "starter" cameras, aimed at those lacking the money or technical understanding to buy more complicated models.
  
====boxes for beginners====
+
====Boxes for Pretenders====
 +
A special category among the box cameras are the [[pseudo TLR]]s. The [[Rolleiflex]] had become a widely-admired camera—and in fact, imitations of it were a major segment of 1950s Japanese camera manufacture. But thanks to inexpensive bakelite moldings, for a few dollars any amateur could walk around with a sophisticated-looking two-lensed model. The difference versus a real [[TLR|twin lens reflex]] camera is that the top lens is only a cheap [[brilliant finder]], and the whole [[reflex finder|reflex focusing]] concept dropped in favor of [[fixed focus]] lenses. Despite the [[Pseudo TLR]]s' often poor image quality they were the industry's way to lure many consumers towards their more advanced offerings in photography.
  
In 1900, when a [[Yale]] plate box camera cost just 2$ and a [[Kodak]] rollfilm box only 1$ the industry sought new customers for its huge production of these simpler cameras. The first new idea came when the international boy scout movement was launched. Since then many Camera makers offered "Scout" models: [[Seneca]], [[Pho-Tak]], [[Kodak]], [[Lumière]], [[Imperial]]. When Kodak celebrated its 50th jubilee it even gave away box cameras as a gift to 550.000 American pupils of a certain age. In Germany [[Agfa]] launched a campaign in the 1930s. People could buy an [[Agfa Box 44]] camera for 4 Marks, below the production price. Agfa regained the lost money by film sales. The [[Ensign Ful-Vue]] was a new approach to box camera design, handsome and with a very big viewfinder. With some exceptions all the 20th century box cameras were easy-to-load conceptions with just a few very overviewable controls.
+
==The Decline==
 +
The rollfilm boxes stayed popular as beginners' cameras until the 1950s, some plastic models even until the 1960s. The decline of the classic box camera began in 1963 when [[Kodak]] introduced their drop-in [[126]] film cartridge, as film loading had remained one complication that frequently stumped beginners. Their [[Instamatic]] cameras were a runaway sales success, and amateur roll-film box cameras went into steep decline. But in truth, most Instamatics remained box cameras in spirit as the most popular models remained just as non-adjustable as the earlier cameras had been. Today, a few varnished-wood [[pinhole camera|pinhole]] box cameras for [[Large format|sheet film]] are available, echoing back to the very earliest box cameras made.  
  
====boxes for pretenders====
+
The lasting success of the cheap plate and rollfilm box cameras is that they helped to make [[photography]] an easily affordable leisure joy for everybody. Some of the late [[bakelite]] and plastic models had a built-in flash for big [[flashbulbs]], thus being a kind of early predecessor of modern [[compact camera]]s.
  
A special category among the box cameras are the pseudo TLRs. These were made for people who feared to be seen as poor if they didn't run around with a two-eyed camera. The difference to the real [[TLR|twin lens reflex]] cameras is that the big lens for the reflex finder is cheap optics and far from being a twin of the camera lens.
+
Last but not least, the lasting success of box cameras lives on in the many many photos taken between 1896 (the first very cheap box camera) to the 1960s (when snapshooters began switching to Instamatics), priceless images which fill many old family albums.
  
===box camera types===
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===Box Camera Types===
{|
+
{|class=plainlinks
 
||[http://www.flickr.com/photos/keithwj/6332554/in/pool-camerapedia/ http://farm1.static.flickr.com/7/6332554_9f4289d983_t.jpg]
 
||[http://www.flickr.com/photos/keithwj/6332554/in/pool-camerapedia/ http://farm1.static.flickr.com/7/6332554_9f4289d983_t.jpg]
||'''sliding box camera''' for daguerreotype and talbotype photography<br/>
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||'''[[sliding box camera]]''' for [[daguerreotype]] and [[calotype|talbotype]] photography<br/>
 
makers: most are unknown, the first one was [[Alphonse Giroux]]
 
makers: most are unknown, the first one was [[Alphonse Giroux]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
||[http://www.flickr.com/photos/89864432@N00/1804962701/in/pool-camerapedia/ http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2153/1804962701_8709961d11_t.jpg]
 
||[http://www.flickr.com/photos/89864432@N00/1804962701/in/pool-camerapedia/ http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2153/1804962701_8709961d11_t.jpg]
 
||'''box camera''' for single plates<br/>
 
||'''box camera''' for single plates<br/>
makers: [[Yale]], [[Ernemann]]
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makers: [[Zar]], [[Yale]], [[Ernemann]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
||[http://www.flickr.com/photos/89864432@N00/1555294874/in/pool-camerapedia/ http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2288/1555294874_3225b5687c_t.jpg]
 
||[http://www.flickr.com/photos/89864432@N00/1555294874/in/pool-camerapedia/ http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2288/1555294874_3225b5687c_t.jpg]
 
||'''box camera''' for multiple plates or '''[[magazine camera]]'''<br/>
 
||'''box camera''' for multiple plates or '''[[magazine camera]]'''<br/>
makers: [[Rudolf Krügener|Dr. Krügener]], [[Adams & Westlake]], [[Houghton]]s, [[E. Suter|Suter]], [[Gaumont]] and others
+
makers: [[Rudolf Krügener|Dr. Krügener]], [[Adams & Westlake]], [[Houghton and Ensign|Houghtons]], [[E. Suter|Suter]], [[Gaumont]], [[Rokuoh-sha]] and others
 
|-
 
|-
 
||[http://www.flickr.com/photos/henry63/433615083/in/pool-camerapedia/ http://farm1.static.flickr.com/188/433615083_7bb7499ad7_t.jpg]
 
||[http://www.flickr.com/photos/henry63/433615083/in/pool-camerapedia/ http://farm1.static.flickr.com/188/433615083_7bb7499ad7_t.jpg]
||'''box camera''' for roll film<br/>
+
||'''box camera''' for roll film, the most successful box camera conception<br/>
makers: [[Emil Wünsche]], H.J. Redding, [[The Kombi|Alfred Kemper]], [[Kodak]], [[Konishiroku]], [[Conley]], [[Houghton-Butcher]], [[Agfa]], [[Lumière]] and others
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makers: [[Emil Wünsche]], H.J. Redding, [[The Kombi|Alfred Kemper]], [[Kodak]], [[Konishiroku]], [[Conley]], [[Houghton and Ensign|Houghton-Butcher]], [[Agfa]], [[Lumière]] and others
 
|-
 
|-
||[http://www.flickr.com/photos/rpiereck/1804102618/in/pool-camerapedia/ http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2034/1804102618_a5440db817_t.jpg]
+
||[http://www.flickr.com/photos/kratz/2083655235/in/pool-camerapedia/ http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2321/2083655235_363a4c9b91_t.jpg]
 +
||'''box camera''' for roll film with built-in flash, early predecessor of the modern [[compact camera]]<br/>makers: [[Kodak]], [[Spartus]], [[Philips]]
 +
|-
 +
||[http://www.flickr.com/photos/heritagefutures/4028642481/in/pool-camerawiki http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2727/4028642481_2a266bc57f_t.jpg]
 
||'''[[pseudo TLR]]''' for roll film<br/>
 
||'''[[pseudo TLR]]''' for roll film<br/>
makers: [[Voigtländer]], [[Alsaphot]] and others
+
makers: [[Ansco]], [[Argus]],[[Voigtländer]], [[Alsaphot]], [[Haking]], [[Kodak]], [[Ginrei]] and others
 
|}
 
|}
  
Box shaped cameras with more sophisticated camera technology contents like the early instant camera [[Appareil Dubroni No 1]] or old semi folding [[SLR]] cameras or real [[TLR]] cameras are not classified as box cameras. So the class of the box cameras is one of simpler camera construction.
+
Box shaped cameras with more sophisticated camera technology contents like the early instant camera [[Appareil Dubroni No 1]] or old semi folding [[SLR]] cameras or real [[TLR]] cameras are not classified as box cameras. The class of box cameras is defined by simpler camera construction and limited controls.
 +
 
 +
One remarkable maker must be mentioned here: [[Charles Louis Chevalier]] who was the first successful maker of collapsible box cameras, a camera type between box and [[folder]], later improved by other makers.
 +
 
 +
==References==
 +
<references/>
 +
 
 +
== External Links ==
  
One remarkable maker must be mentioned here: [[Thomas Ottewill]] who was the first successful maker of collapsible box cameras, a unique camera type between box and [[folder]].
+
* [http://www.picturenoise.com/indexmenu.html Picture gallery using Box Cameras]
  
 
[[Category:Camera architecture]]
 
[[Category:Camera architecture]]
 +
[[Category:Box]]
  
{{glossary}}
+
{{Glossary}}

Revision as of 19:39, 15 May 2011

Box cameras are the earliest class of camera types, originating in the 19th Century; later evolving into simple rollfilm models which remained popular as cameras for beginners until the 1960s.

History

The box cameras are the oldest class of photographic cameras. The first camera ever used for making persistent photographic images was the big wooden box camera that Nicéphore Niépce used for experimental photography in the mid-1820s. When Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre joined his developments of new photographic processes they already used box cameras with iris diaphragm. Daguerre gave Niépce such a camera. Concerning lenses they had different preferences, Daguerre liked the color corrected (achromatic) version of the periscopic lens of optician-engineer Dr. Wollaston, Niépce sought the help of the opticians Vincent and Charles Chevalier. Some years later William Henry Fox Talbot made his photographic experiments. He had a whole series of little box cameras ("mousetraps") to be able to make several exposures on one sunny day - exposure times were very long in those pioneering days. The box design of all these pioneer cameras was derived from a certain variant of the camera obscura.

When Daguerre could present a photographic process with acceptable exposure times in 1839 he made plans for a very heavy wooden box camera that became the model for many early photographic cameras: A box with an open back, and a hole in the middle of the front to mount a lens or a diaphragm and a lens. Shutters were not needed, the lens cap was sufficient. A second box, one with open front side, held in its back the light sensitive plate in its holder, or the focusing ground glass instead. The second box had to be pushed like a drawer into the outer box. Focusing was made with open lens, wide aperture and ground glass in the back by shifting the inner box for- or backward until the image subject appeared sharply on the screen. Since the sliding drawer should not hang in its position the bottom plate of the outer box was of double length so that the inner box was always moved on this plane. Alphonse Giroux was the maker of the biggest series of Daguerre's original camera "Le Daguerreotype", some made of fine walnut wood. He used achromatic lenses of the optician Charles Chevalier. Optician Bianchi produced a similar camera, probably with own lenses but the woodwork done by the same craftsmen that made Giroux's cameras. It's supposed that the Susse brothers made a small series of "Le Daguerreotype" too. In 2007 such a camera appeared for the first time in a photographica auction. 168 years after the production of the original camera the successful bidder must have a strong belief in its authenticity. Other early makers of sliding box cameras for the daguerreotype or the talbotype process were Gaudin & Lerebours (F), James Ottevill (GB) and John Roberts (USA) as well as many unknown craftsmen of the 1840s.

Boxes as a Means to Popularize Photography

Even at the beginning, amateurs participated in the photography business, at least as customers for photographic material. But traveling was expensive, and camera equipment was heavy, so that a camera was not in the luggage of even many rich travelers. But by the end of the 19th century, circumstances were changing. Dry plates, roll film, drugstores with darkrooms to rent, material and infrastructure were emerging to support a spreading of amateur photography. And traveling was becoming easy and affordable since the railway networks reached a high density and trains were much faster.

The industry had to invent easy-to-use cameras for all the new potential camera buyers. Box cameras were one key product in that market. They contained a simple camera technology, the best for mass production. And they offered the convenience of making a whole series of photos without reloading. In 1888 the Kodak No. 1 with built-in 100-exposure paper film roll was only the first of many rollfilm box cameras that appeared on the market. With clever marketing and advertising the cameras found more and more customers. But the film plates and sheet film got a chance on that market through another type of box camera, the magazine camera. The related camera makers used their cleverness for several ingenious plate change mechanisms. The magazine box cameras eventually vanished by the 1920s.

Boxes for Beginners

In 1896 Zar made the first very cheap entry-level box camera. In 1900, a Yale plate box camera cost just $2, including complete developing/printing/toning kit. The box cameras for single film plates were soon eclipsed by Kodak's 1900 introduction a $1 box camera for roll film, the first Brownie. This concept of an affordable, simple camera was what brought photography to a mass market. Another new marketing theme arose when the international boy scout movement was launched. Many Camera makers then offered "Scout" models: Seneca, Pho-Tak, Kodak, Lumière, Imperial. When Kodak celebrated its 50th jubilee it even gave away box cameras as a gift to 550.000 American pupils of a certain age. In Germany Agfa launched a campaign in the 1930s. People could buy an Agfa Box 44 camera for 4 Marks, below the production price. Agfa regained the lost money by film sales.


Midcentury: The Box Camera Evolves

The 1946 redesign of the Ensign Ful-Vue was a new approach to box camera design, handsome and with a very big viewfinder. New developments in plastics molding, such as bakelite, meant manufacturers were no longer limited to the old cubical box shapes. In fact, fanciful styling could help add eye appeal in what was becoming a mass consumer product. The term "Box Camera" was evolving, and by the 1950s meant any simple, rigid-bodied amateur camera lacking much in the way of exposure or focus adjustments.[1]. But box cameras continued their role as approachable "starter" cameras, aimed at those lacking the money or technical understanding to buy more complicated models.

Boxes for Pretenders

A special category among the box cameras are the pseudo TLRs. The Rolleiflex had become a widely-admired camera—and in fact, imitations of it were a major segment of 1950s Japanese camera manufacture. But thanks to inexpensive bakelite moldings, for a few dollars any amateur could walk around with a sophisticated-looking two-lensed model. The difference versus a real twin lens reflex camera is that the top lens is only a cheap brilliant finder, and the whole reflex focusing concept dropped in favor of fixed focus lenses. Despite the Pseudo TLRs' often poor image quality they were the industry's way to lure many consumers towards their more advanced offerings in photography.

The Decline

The rollfilm boxes stayed popular as beginners' cameras until the 1950s, some plastic models even until the 1960s. The decline of the classic box camera began in 1963 when Kodak introduced their drop-in 126 film cartridge, as film loading had remained one complication that frequently stumped beginners. Their Instamatic cameras were a runaway sales success, and amateur roll-film box cameras went into steep decline. But in truth, most Instamatics remained box cameras in spirit as the most popular models remained just as non-adjustable as the earlier cameras had been. Today, a few varnished-wood pinhole box cameras for sheet film are available, echoing back to the very earliest box cameras made.

The lasting success of the cheap plate and rollfilm box cameras is that they helped to make photography an easily affordable leisure joy for everybody. Some of the late bakelite and plastic models had a built-in flash for big flashbulbs, thus being a kind of early predecessor of modern compact cameras.

Last but not least, the lasting success of box cameras lives on in the many many photos taken between 1896 (the first very cheap box camera) to the 1960s (when snapshooters began switching to Instamatics), priceless images which fill many old family albums.

Box Camera Types

Box shaped cameras with more sophisticated camera technology contents like the early instant camera Appareil Dubroni No 1 or old semi folding SLR cameras or real TLR cameras are not classified as box cameras. The class of box cameras is defined by simpler camera construction and limited controls.

One remarkable maker must be mentioned here: Charles Louis Chevalier who was the first successful maker of collapsible box cameras, a camera type between box and folder, later improved by other makers.

References

  1. "What Kind of Camera for You?" in Popular Mechanics magazine (USA), February 1955; at Google Books

External Links

Glossary Terms