Difference between revisions of "Fowell"

From Camera-wiki.org
Jump to: navigation, search
m (It's a copy of the Spartus 35, not the synchronised 35F)
m (-stub)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{stub}}
+
 
 
<div class="floatright plainlinks" style="margin:0px 0px 10px 15px;">
 
<div class="floatright plainlinks" style="margin:0px 0px 10px 15px;">
 
{{Flickr image
 
{{Flickr image
Line 11: Line 11:
 
</div>
 
</div>
  
'''Fowell (Manufacturas de Física Aplicada Fowell S.A.)''' was a camera-maker in Madrid, Spain, from the late 1940s until at least the mid-60s. The company's cameras all seem to be copies of foreign models (some possibly rebadged imports). Flickr user Massimo (supplier of the picture used here) gives the company address as Calle Vicero N° 3; That street does not appear to exist, but Calle Vivero does, near Cuatro Caminos.
+
'''Fowell (Manufacturas de Física Aplicada Fowell S.A.)''' was a camera-maker in Madrid, Spain, from the late 1940s until at least the mid-60s. The company's cameras seem mostly to be copies of foreign models. Flickr user Massimo (supplier of the picture used here) gives the company address as Calle Vicero N° 3; That street does not appear to exist, but Calle Vivero does, near Cuatro Caminos.
  
 
Notes on Fowell at the collector's site ''Nuestra Colección de Cámaras''<ref>[https://camarastensyantonio.weebly.com/fowell.html Fowell] at [https://camarastensyantonio.weebly.com/ Nuestra Colección de Cámaras]</ref> explain that in the 1940s and '50s, Spain had the legal device of 'introductory patents' (Patentes de Introducción), which made it possible for Spanish companies to copy products patented abroad for sale in Spain. Since import of goods into Spain was controlled and expensive, these patents might be the only way such products might be made available there, and they did require the original maker to be acknowledged, but they made the copying of foreign products easy, with little benefit to the foreign maker.<ref>[http://www.enciclopedia-juridica.com/d/patentes-de-introducci%C3%B3n/patentes-de-introducci%C3%B3n.htm Patentes de Introducción] at [http://www.enciclopedia-juridica.com/ Inciclopedia Juridica]</ref>
 
Notes on Fowell at the collector's site ''Nuestra Colección de Cámaras''<ref>[https://camarastensyantonio.weebly.com/fowell.html Fowell] at [https://camarastensyantonio.weebly.com/ Nuestra Colección de Cámaras]</ref> explain that in the 1940s and '50s, Spain had the legal device of 'introductory patents' (Patentes de Introducción), which made it possible for Spanish companies to copy products patented abroad for sale in Spain. Since import of goods into Spain was controlled and expensive, these patents might be the only way such products might be made available there, and they did require the original maker to be acknowledged, but they made the copying of foreign products easy, with little benefit to the foreign maker.<ref>[http://www.enciclopedia-juridica.com/d/patentes-de-introducci%C3%B3n/patentes-de-introducci%C3%B3n.htm Patentes de Introducción] at [http://www.enciclopedia-juridica.com/ Inciclopedia Juridica]</ref>
Line 18: Line 18:
 
== Cameras ==
 
== Cameras ==
 
* [[Fowell Cinefilm 35A]] (a copy of the [[Spartus 35]], 1950-55)
 
* [[Fowell Cinefilm 35A]] (a copy of the [[Spartus 35]], 1950-55)
* Fowell Saeta (mid-50s)
+
* [[Fowell Saeta]] (mid-50s)
 
* [[Fowell Viking|Viking]] (c.1960-65)<ref>[https://www.collectiongeven.com/piwigo/picture.php?/2432 Viking] at [https://www.collectiongeven.com/ Collection G. Even's site]</ref>
 
* [[Fowell Viking|Viking]] (c.1960-65)<ref>[https://www.collectiongeven.com/piwigo/picture.php?/2432 Viking] at [https://www.collectiongeven.com/ Collection G. Even's site]</ref>
  

Latest revision as of 08:57, 4 April 2021

Fowell (Manufacturas de Física Aplicada Fowell S.A.) was a camera-maker in Madrid, Spain, from the late 1940s until at least the mid-60s. The company's cameras seem mostly to be copies of foreign models. Flickr user Massimo (supplier of the picture used here) gives the company address as Calle Vicero N° 3; That street does not appear to exist, but Calle Vivero does, near Cuatro Caminos.

Notes on Fowell at the collector's site Nuestra Colección de Cámaras[1] explain that in the 1940s and '50s, Spain had the legal device of 'introductory patents' (Patentes de Introducción), which made it possible for Spanish companies to copy products patented abroad for sale in Spain. Since import of goods into Spain was controlled and expensive, these patents might be the only way such products might be made available there, and they did require the original maker to be acknowledged, but they made the copying of foreign products easy, with little benefit to the foreign maker.[2]


Cameras

Notes

Links

In French :