Difference between revisions of "Sun Ray"

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|image_rights= Public domain US no copyright
 
|image_rights= Public domain US no copyright
 
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|image_source= https://www.flickr.com/photos/brycemilton/40010566761/in/pool-camerawiki
 
|image= http://farm5.staticflickr.com/4695/40010566761_641943ef10_n.jpg
 
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|image_text= 1940's Sun Ray Zenith 35 with the Elgeet 51mm 1:4 enlarging lens
 
|image_by= Bryce Milton
 
|image_rights= non-commercial
 
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=== Enlargers ===
 
=== Enlargers ===
 
All models employed a double-condenser head with bellows focusing mechanism, save the Aristocrat A (which used a diffusion head):
 
All models employed a double-condenser head with bellows focusing mechanism, save the Aristocrat A (which used a diffusion head):

Revision as of 04:47, 11 April 2024

Sun Ray Photo is an American company based in New York, NY during the 1940's and 1950's.

Enlargers

All models employed a double-condenser head with bellows focusing mechanism, save the Aristocrat A (which used a diffusion head):

  • Sun Ray Aristocrat A
  • Sun Ray Mastercraft 23
  • Sun Ray Mastercraft 45
  • Sun Ray Model A Mastercraft
  • Sun Ray Model B Mastercraft
  • Sun Ray Model B Miniture
  • Sun Ray Model C Mastercraft
  • Sun Ray Model C Miniture
  • Sun Ray Model D Arnold
  • Sun Ray Craftsmen
  • Sun Ray Filmaster
  • Sun Ray Grant Miniature
  • Sun Ray Grant Senior
  • Sun Ray Zenith 35
    • This sturdy (11 pound)[1] die-cast aluminium alloy portable enlarger was originally designed for military use in the field. [2]
    • Deployed as part of a complete suitcase-portable field darkroom kit that included the Bolsey B Special Special camera.[2]
    • You can get a general idea of what these portable darkrooms looked like by viewing this video: "Cameras Used Before and During WW2"
    • This 35mm format enlarger was designed to make prints from contact size up to 11"x14", and was designed for either vertical or horizontal projection.[3]
    • Surviving the demise of the Sun Ray Company, the Zenith 35 continued in production by the TestRite company into the 1960's.[2]

Notes

  1. "JAPANESE PLAN A PHOTO CENTER" (New York, NY: New York Times, October 9, 1955; Page 24, Section X)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Kalton C. Lahue & Joseph A. Bailey, "Glass, Brass, & Chrome" (Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press, 2002; ISBN 0-8061-3434-8)
  3. "DARKROOM EQUIPMENT" (New York, NY: Popular Photography, Ziff-Davis Publishing, Feb 1956; Vol. 38, Num. 2, Pg. 314)