Difference between revisions of "Dollond"
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The company still exists as Dollond and Aitchison opticians. | The company still exists as Dollond and Aitchison opticians. | ||
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==Sources== | ==Sources== | ||
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articles on '''Dollond, George''', '''Dollond, John''' and '''Dollond, Peter'''. | articles on '''Dollond, George''', '''Dollond, John''' and '''Dollond, Peter'''. | ||
* [http://www.danda.co.uk/about-us/history/ Dollond & Aitchison history page] | * [http://www.danda.co.uk/about-us/history/ Dollond & Aitchison history page] | ||
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[[Category: UK]] | [[Category: UK]] | ||
[[Category: Camera makers]] | [[Category: Camera makers]] |
Revision as of 05:02, 18 February 2013
British companies | ||
Adams & Co. | Agilux | Aldis | APeM | Aptus | Artima | Barnet Ensign | Beard | Beck | Benetfink | Billcliff | Boots | British Ferrotype | Butcher | Chapman | Cooke | Corfield | Coronet | Dallmeyer | Dekko | De Vere | Dixons | Dollond | Elliott | Gandolfi | Gnome | Griffiths | G. Hare | Houghtons | Houghton-Butcher | Hunter | Ilford | Jackson | Johnson | Kentmere | Kershaw-Soho | Kodak Ltd. | Lancaster | Lejeune and Perken | Lizars | London & Paris Optic & Clock Company | Marion | Marlow | Meagher | MPP | Neville | Newman & Guardia | Pearson and Denham | Perken, Son and Company | Perken, Son & Rayment | Photopia | Purma | Reid & Sigrist | Reynolds and Branson | Ross | Ross Ensign | Sanderson | Sands & Hunter | Shackman | Shew | Soho | Standard Cameras Ltd | Taylor-Hobson | Thornton-Pickard | Underwood | United | Watkins | Watson | Wynne's Infallible | Wray |
Dollond was a UK-based optical and mathematical instrument company, founded in 1750 in London by John Dollond (1706-1761) and his son Peter (1730-1820). John Dollond invented one of the first achromatic lenses - patented in 1758 (if not The First, although optician George Bass seems to have made achromats, perhaps from 1729[1]). This lens was used for the first achromatic telescope; the Dollonds went on to make several more inventions in achromatic lenses, telescopes and heliometers. Peter's nephew George Dollond (1774-1852) took over the company in 1819.
Dollond's had sold Cameras Lucidae and Cameras Obscurae in the 18th and 19th Century, and sold film cameras in the early 20th.
- Dollond Owl (folding)
The company still exists as Dollond and Aitchison opticians.
Notes
- ↑ Sphaera article at the Museum of the History of Science, University of Oxford
Sources
- Encyclopædia Britannica, 2008, Encyclopædia Britannica 2006 Ultimate Reference Suite;
articles on Dollond, George, Dollond, John and Dollond, Peter.