Difference between revisions of "Victo"

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m (Corrected date for intro of Triple Victo)
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** [http://www.bonhams.com/auctions/10432/lot/653/ Tropical Victo] with f/6 No. 2 Ensign anastigmat, sold in October 2003; no roller shutter, so this may have been front-mounted.  
 
** [http://www.bonhams.com/auctions/10432/lot/653/ Tropical Victo] with f/6 No. 2 Ensign anastigmat, sold in October 2003; no roller shutter, so this may have been front-mounted.  
  
 
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[[Category: View cameras]]
 
[[Category: Folding plate]]
 
[[Category: Folding plate]]
 
[[Category: Half plate]]
 
[[Category: Half plate]]

Revision as of 20:39, 17 January 2019

The Victo is a folding half-plate (and other sizes[1]) field camera made by Houghton from about 1898.[2] It was introduced as a fairly basic camera, but features were added to later models, including triple extension from 1904 (so that the cameras are thereafter the Triple Victo), a good range of movements, and automatic locking of the front and rear standards as the camera was unfolded.[2] Early models are equipped with a Thornton-Pickard roller shutter; Wood and Brass shows an example from around 1900;[3] This was replaced in about 1911 with Houghton's own shutter.[2]

Stereo models of the camera were made.[4]

Examples seen (on the websites cited here) have Rapid Rectilinear and Busch Rapid Symmetrical lenses. Historic Camera states (information apparently taken from a 1909 catalogue) that symmetrical lenses by Beck, Ensign or Busch (presumably Rapid Rectilinears) or Aldis Anastigmats were available.[5]



Notes

  1. Triple Victo said to be postcard (5½x3½-inch) size, sold at auction by Christie's of London in July 2001; no picture.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 1911 Triple Victo (rebadged by Youdall of Leeds), with Ensign shutter giving speeds 1/15 - 1/150 second, plus 'T', and 9-inch f/8 Rapid Rectilinear; also notes about the development of the Victo series of cameras; at Early Photography.
  3. 1900 Victo at Wood and Brass.
  4. Stereo Triple Victo at Wood and Brass.
  5. Tropical Victo at Historic Camera; picture and text reproduced from a catalogue of 1909.

Links