Difference between revisions of "Suter"

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'''E. Suter''' was a lens and camera maker, founded in 1878 in Basel, Switzerland. It was the first factory size camera business in Switzerland. Suter made cameras and lenses, and imported goods from other makers like [[Mackenstein]], Paris. Emil Suter designed and manufactured brass barrel lenses, based on his own patent of 1900, comprising an eight element two group design. Another product line where licensed lens types like [[Carl Zeiss|Zeiss]]' Anqastigmat (=Zeiss Protar). Suter's Reisekameras were of the well established tailboard constuction [[Continental View]] type. The Swiss-Box and the Detectiv Magazin camera were quite individual constructions. The [[Cupido]] was a 9x12cm [[plate]] camera, a unique construction with self-erecting bellows. This invention seems to have been shared with [[Hüttig]], even the name Cupido was also given to such 9x12 cameras of the camera maker from Dresden and its successor [[Ica]]. Suter's and Hüttig's Cupido were different except their use of the same [[bellows]] unfolding mechanism.
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'''E. Suter''' was a lens and camera maker, founded in 1878 in Basel, Switzerland. It was the first factory size camera business in Switzerland. Suter made cameras and lenses, and imported goods from other makers like [[Mackenstein]], Paris. Emil Suter designed and manufactured brass barrel lenses, based on his own patent of 1900, comprising an eight element two group design. Another product line where licensed lens types like [[Paul Rudolph]]'s original construction of the [[Anastigmat]] for [[Carl Zeiss|Zeiss]] (the [[Protar]]). A further of Rudolph's lens constructions made by Suter was the Doppel-Plasmat. Suter's Reisekameras were of the well established tailboard constuction [[Continental View]] type. The Swiss-Box and the Detectiv Magazin camera were quite individual constructions. The [[Cupido]] was a 9x12cm [[plate]] camera, a unique construction with self-erecting bellows. This invention seems to have been shared with [[Hüttig]], even the name Cupido was also given to such 9x12 cameras of the camera maker from Dresden and its successor [[Ica]]. Suter's and Hüttig's Cupido were different except their use of the same [[bellows]] unfolding mechanism.
  
 
1913 the company became a stock market company. The '''Optische Anstalt E. Suter AG''' was closed in 2005
 
1913 the company became a stock market company. The '''Optische Anstalt E. Suter AG''' was closed in 2005
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* [[Anastigmat]]
 
* [[Anastigmat]]
 
* "Stella" Doppel-Anastigmat
 
* "Stella" Doppel-Anastigmat
 +
* Doppel-Plasmat
 
* [[Aplanat]]
 
* [[Aplanat]]
 
* Rapid Aplanat
 
* Rapid Aplanat

Revision as of 12:04, 6 November 2012

E. Suter was a lens and camera maker, founded in 1878 in Basel, Switzerland. It was the first factory size camera business in Switzerland. Suter made cameras and lenses, and imported goods from other makers like Mackenstein, Paris. Emil Suter designed and manufactured brass barrel lenses, based on his own patent of 1900, comprising an eight element two group design. Another product line where licensed lens types like Paul Rudolph's original construction of the Anastigmat for Zeiss (the Protar). A further of Rudolph's lens constructions made by Suter was the Doppel-Plasmat. Suter's Reisekameras were of the well established tailboard constuction Continental View type. The Swiss-Box and the Detectiv Magazin camera were quite individual constructions. The Cupido was a 9x12cm plate camera, a unique construction with self-erecting bellows. This invention seems to have been shared with Hüttig, even the name Cupido was also given to such 9x12 cameras of the camera maker from Dresden and its successor Ica. Suter's and Hüttig's Cupido were different except their use of the same bellows unfolding mechanism.

1913 the company became a stock market company. The Optische Anstalt E. Suter AG was closed in 2005

cameras

  • Reisekamera 13×18 cm
  • Reisekamera 18×24 cm
  • Swiss-Box 3×4 cm
  • Liliput 3×4 cm
  • Detectiv Magazin Kamera
  • Cupido
  • 9×12 and 10×15 folding bed cameras

Lenses

Links