Difference between revisions of "Contessa-Nettel Stereo"

From Camera-wiki.org
Jump to: navigation, search
(Links: Added interesting Link)
(Links)
Line 11: Line 11:
 
== Links ==
 
== Links ==
 
<!--Commented out link, page no longer present/available, please remove if not returned by 06/2017 *[http://www.phsne.org/stereocameras/Plate/plate-2.htm Contessa Nettel tropical, a similar camera, but for postcard format, shown among other stereo cameras] at Photographic Historical Society of New England [http://www.phsne.org]  -->
 
<!--Commented out link, page no longer present/available, please remove if not returned by 06/2017 *[http://www.phsne.org/stereocameras/Plate/plate-2.htm Contessa Nettel tropical, a similar camera, but for postcard format, shown among other stereo cameras] at Photographic Historical Society of New England [http://www.phsne.org]  -->
*[http://www.clickondavid.com/Contessa.htm Contessa-Nettel Deckrullo Stereo Tropical] at David Photographic [http://www.clickondavid.com]
 
 
*[http://www.clickondavid.com/images/contessa.pdf Contessa-Nettel Stereo Tropical description (pdf)] at [http://www.clickondavid.com/ David Photographic]
 
*[http://www.clickondavid.com/images/contessa.pdf Contessa-Nettel Stereo Tropical description (pdf)] at [http://www.clickondavid.com/ David Photographic]
  

Revision as of 06:18, 12 January 2017

Contessa-Nettel offered a wide range of stereo camera types. In the literature some of these cameras are listed just as Contessa-Nettel Stereo camera despite of the many illustrious names that the company gave to its cameras. The one in the picture above is badged "Capi", but no Contessa-Nettel camera type list contains that name. It seems to be almost the same camera as is listed as Contessa-Nettel-Stereo in vol. 1 of H.D. Abrings "From Daguerre to today". A similar camera is described in depth in the source of "David Photographic" (see links below). It is a strut folding plate camera made of very fine wood and leather, equipped with sports finder, focal plane shutter and a pair of 1:4.5 Tessar lenses in a vertically movable lens board. One lens is mounted in a rectangular metal plate that is mounted onto the wooden stereo lens board. This plate can be turned so that the lens is nearly in the middle of the camera's lens board. With the one lens moved into the middle that way and the other covered with a cap the camera becomes a panorama camera.

Links