Kosmo-Clack

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The Kosmo-Clack is a stereo camera for 4.5×10.7 cm (1¾×4¼ inch) plates or film packs, made in about 1914 by Rietzschel.[1] It has two lenses (all examples that have been seen have Rietzschel's own 65 mm f/4.5 Linear or f/6.8 Sextar lenses) in a Stereo-Compur shutter, giving speeds from 1 to 1/250 second, plus 'B' and 'T'.

The lens board allows front rise,[2] and can also slide to position one of the lenses centrally, so that the camera can be used for panoramic photographs instead of stereo (using the whole plate for one exposure).

The camera has a double-extension bellows. This allows the camera to focus to 0.5 metres with the lenses in their normal state. The article at Early Photography states that bellows focusing is an unusual feature in a stereo camera.[3] The same article also points out that the front element of each lens can be removed to give a longer focal length, and the bellows extension allows this arrangement to be used.[3] There is an infinity-focus mark for the lenses in this state on the focus scale.

The camera body is also used as a stereo viewer, by mounting a pair of eyepiece lenses in place of the lens board.[2]

Different examples have either a folding brilliant finder or a folding Newton-type viewfinder, with cross-hairs (Early Photography suggests this is provided on cameras made earlier[3]). There are tripod bushes on the base and on one end of the camera, and bubble levels for horizontal and vertical orientation.


Notes

  1. McKeown, James M. and Joan C. McKeown's Price Guide to Antique and Classic Cameras, 12th Edition, 2005-2006. USA, Centennial Photo Service, 2004. ISBN 0-931838-40-1 (hardcover). ISBN 0-931838-41-X (softcover). p826.
  2. 2.0 2.1 The presentation on the Kosmo-Clack at Welt der Stereoskopie shows this and other features in an excellent set of photographs of the camera, film pack holder, plate magazine and stereo viewer eyepiece.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Kosmo-Clack with Linear lenses and brilliant finder, at Early Photography.


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