Difference between revisions of "R. F. Hunter"
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* Gugo viewfinder camera (made by [[Goldammer]], c.1953)<ref>[http://www.historyworld.co.uk/advert.php?id=1093&offset=0&sort=0&l1=Photography&l2= 1953 Hunter ad for Gugo]</ref> | * Gugo viewfinder camera (made by [[Goldammer]], c.1953)<ref>[http://www.historyworld.co.uk/advert.php?id=1093&offset=0&sort=0&l1=Photography&l2= 1953 Hunter ad for Gugo]</ref> | ||
* [[Hunter 35]] (a rebadged Steinette, made by [[Steiner]], c.1957) | * [[Hunter 35]] (a rebadged Steinette, made by [[Steiner]], c.1957) | ||
− | * [[Hunter 35 R]] (a Hunter 35 with a [[rangefinder (device)|rangefinder]]) | + | * [[Hunter 35 | Hunter 35 R]] (a Hunter 35 with a [[rangefinder (device)|rangefinder]]) |
* Hunter cine (Bingoscope) | * Hunter cine (Bingoscope) | ||
* [[Purma| Purma Speed, Purma Special, Purma Plus]] | * [[Purma| Purma Speed, Purma Special, Purma Plus]] |
Revision as of 19:02, 17 November 2011
R.F. Hunter Ltd. were an importing and distribution company based at 51 Gray's Inn Road, and previously at 40 Doughty St. in Central London, England - who included various cameras, cine films and slide strips in their products. They seemed to specialise in quite odd-ball cameras, such as the gravity-control shuttered Purma and the stainless-steel fronted Gilbert box camera with rotating viewfinder.
In the early 1930s, Hunter's distributed Celfix cine projectors and cameras and Hunter-rebadged Bingoscope cine projectors, and supplied films and film strips for these.
Hunter's also supplied Franka cameras and Rolleiflexes in the 1950s-60s.
Cameras & Lenses supplied
Schneider lens ad by R.F. Hunter from British Journal Photographic Almanac 1932 image by Dirk HR Spennemann (Image rights) |
- Celfix cine
- Ebner[1]
- Franka
- Gilbert box, c.1953[2]
- Gugo viewfinder camera (made by Goldammer, c.1953)[3]
- Hunter 35 (a rebadged Steinette, made by Steiner, c.1957)
- Hunter 35 R (a Hunter 35 with a rangefinder)
- Hunter cine (Bingoscope)
- Purma Speed, Purma Special, Purma Plus
- Rolleiflex
- Rolloroy (a rebadged Nagel Pupille, 1930)
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 |