Difference between revisions of "Dallmeyer Speed"

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The '''Dallmeyer Speed''' is a hand-held plate camera made by [[Newman & Guardia]] for [[Dallmeyer]] of London in the 1920s. It is fitted with Dallmeyer's fast f/2.9 Pentac lens, and has a focal-plane shutter. It was made in at least three sizes: ''Early Photography'' shows examples of the camera for 'vest pocket' size (4.5x6 cm), 3½x2½-inch, and quarter-plate (3¼x4¼-inch) plates, in double dark-slides.<ref name=EP>[http://www.earlyphotography.co.uk/site/entry_C603.html Dallmeyer Speed] cameras in three sizes, at [http://www.earlyphotography.co.uk/ Early Photography]</ref> The camera has a wooden box-shaped body, with a folding bed. The front standard pulls out on scissor-struts from the body, in simple rails on the bed, up to a stop at the front. Focusing is by a radial control at the front, down to two yards. A ground-glass screen could also be used. There is a folding frame finder. The front standard allows some front rise.
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The '''Dallmeyer Speed''' is a hand-held plate camera made by [[Newman & Guardia]] for [[Dallmeyer]] of London in the 1920s. It is fitted with Dallmeyer's fast f/2.9 Pentac lens, and has a focal-plane shutter. It was made in at least three sizes: ''Early Photography'' shows examples of the camera for 'vest pocket' size (4.5x6 cm), 3½x2½-inch, and quarter-plate (3¼x4¼-inch) plates, in double dark-slides.<ref name=EP>[http://www.earlyphotography.co.uk/site/entry_C603.html Dallmeyer Speed] cameras in three sizes, at [http://www.earlyphotography.co.uk/ Early Photography]</ref> The camera has a metal box-shaped body, with a folding bed. The front standard pulls out on scissor-struts from the body, in simple rails on the bed, up to a stop at the front. Focusing is by a radial control at the front, down to two yards. A ground-glass screen could also be used. There is a folding frame finder. The front standard allows some front rise.
  
 
The camera, in one of the larger sizes, appears in the 1933 film ''The Ghost Camera'', in which the protagonist finds it, containing a photograph of a murder.<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0024054/mediaviewer/rm1682572545/?ref_=tt_md_5 Dallmeyer Speed] examined by Henry Kendall in ''The Ghost Camera'' (1933), at [https://www.imdb.com/ IMDB].</ref>
 
The camera, in one of the larger sizes, appears in the 1933 film ''The Ghost Camera'', in which the protagonist finds it, containing a photograph of a murder.<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0024054/mediaviewer/rm1682572545/?ref_=tt_md_5 Dallmeyer Speed] examined by Henry Kendall in ''The Ghost Camera'' (1933), at [https://www.imdb.com/ IMDB].</ref>

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The Dallmeyer Speed is a hand-held plate camera made by Newman & Guardia for Dallmeyer of London in the 1920s. It is fitted with Dallmeyer's fast f/2.9 Pentac lens, and has a focal-plane shutter. It was made in at least three sizes: Early Photography shows examples of the camera for 'vest pocket' size (4.5x6 cm), 3½x2½-inch, and quarter-plate (3¼x4¼-inch) plates, in double dark-slides.[1] The camera has a metal box-shaped body, with a folding bed. The front standard pulls out on scissor-struts from the body, in simple rails on the bed, up to a stop at the front. Focusing is by a radial control at the front, down to two yards. A ground-glass screen could also be used. There is a folding frame finder. The front standard allows some front rise.

The camera, in one of the larger sizes, appears in the 1933 film The Ghost Camera, in which the protagonist finds it, containing a photograph of a murder.[2]


Notes

  1. Dallmeyer Speed cameras in three sizes, at Early Photography
  2. Dallmeyer Speed examined by Henry Kendall in The Ghost Camera (1933), at IMDB.