Difference between revisions of "Lerochrome"

From Camera-wiki.org
Jump to: navigation, search
(+ link to blog post with the camera)
m (Links: Redirected Link URL to archived version)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{stub}}
+
 
 
<div class="floatright plainlinks" style="margin:0px 0px 15px 15px;">
 
<div class="floatright plainlinks" style="margin:0px 0px 15px 15px;">
 
{{Flickr_image
 
{{Flickr_image
Line 21: Line 21:
 
==Links==
 
==Links==
 
* [http://www.nationalphotocolor.com/ National Photocolor Corporation] website; the company makes optical pellicle mirrors and filters.
 
* [http://www.nationalphotocolor.com/ National Photocolor Corporation] website; the company makes optical pellicle mirrors and filters.
* [http://trichromie.free.fr/trichromie/index.php?post/2007/12/26/547-troisime-achat Lerochrome 5x7] camera featured in a post at the French-language blog, [http://trichromie.free.fr/trichromie/index.php? Le blog de la Trichromie]
+
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20190903110319/http://trichromie.free.fr/trichromie/index.php?post/2007/12/26/547-troisime-achat Lerochrome 5x7] camera featured in a post at the French-language blog, [https://web.archive.org/web/20190903073020/http://trichromie.free.fr/trichromie/index.php Le blog de la Trichromie] (archived)
  
 
[[Category:Three-color cameras]]
 
[[Category:Three-color cameras]]
Line 27: Line 27:
 
[[Category:5x7in]]
 
[[Category:5x7in]]
 
[[Category:6x9]]
 
[[Category:6x9]]
 +
[[Category:USA]]
 +
[[Category:L]]

Latest revision as of 06:59, 12 March 2022

Lerochrome is the name of a range of three-color cameras made by the National Photocolor Corporation of New York in the 1930s and '40s. Cameras were made in three sizes: 2¼x3¼ inch, 3¼x4¼ inch (quarter plate), and 5x7 inch, and could use glass plates, cut film or film packs. They are for a 'one-shot' three-color process; that is, three plates, each exposed through a different colored filter, are exposed simultaneously, and the images combined to make one color image. Thus the cameras have three positions for plate-holders, and internal mirrors to split the image-forming light between them.

A 1939 advertisement offers the quarter-plate Lerochrome 'Daylight Special' camera,[1] with an 8¼-inch f/4.5 Meyer Aristostigmat in Compound shutter, and with a coupled rangefinder and parallax-corrected viewfinder. A ground-glass focusing screen can also be used. The dimensions of the camera are 6½x9x9 inches, and its weight 7½ pounds (3 kg). It is metal-bodied, with black crinkle-finish paint and chrome-plated fittings.


Notes

  1. Advertisement for Lerochrome cameras by National Photocolor Corp., featuring the quarter-plate 'Daylight Special', in Popular Photography Vol. 5, No. 5 (November 1939), p121; at Google Books.


Links