TDC Stereo Colorist
TDC Stereo Colorist |
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Date of Production: 1954
Film type: 35mm
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The TDC Stereo Colorist was introduced in 1954 as a competitor in the stereo market to the popular Stereo Realist.
While the Stereo Colorist is scale focusing, the 1957 Stereo Colorist II has a coupled rangefinder, combined with the viewfinder in the same eyepiece. Both models have three-element Rodenstock 35mm f/3.5 Trinar lenses and are otherwise similar.
However initially, the rather different TDC Stereo Vivid was the more premium, rangefinder-focusing model.
TDC stereo models are designed to use 35mm color reversal (slide) film. The format of the picture is 23x24 mm, the '5p' (i.e. five perforations of 35mm film) that was used in the Stereo Realist.
Both the Stereo Colorist and the Stereo Colorist II were made in Germany by Bodensee Kamerawerke for Three Dimension Company, a subsidiary of Bell & Howell.
TDC Stereo Colorist II image by chris00nj (Image rights) |
Links
- Stereo Colorist user manual at Butkus.org
- Stereo Colorist and Stereo Colorist II at Welt der Stereoskopie (text in German).
- TDC Stereo Colorist at stereoscopy.com
- Die Stereo-Colorist und ihre Geschichte (The Stereo Colorist and its history); notes (in German) on the camera, Bodenseewerk and its relationship with TDC and B&H, at Martin Kohler's 3d-historich.de.
- TDC Stereo Colorist II review at Through the Lens (a UK blog).