Difference between revisions of "Wild"

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*APK1 panoramic camera, about 1970, making seven exposures on one 4x5-inch sheet of film. Wild 98.8 mm f/8 lens, with shutter speeds 1 - 1/500 second, plus 'B'.<ref>[https://wlpa.auction2000.se/auk/w.Object?inC=WLPA&inA=20141215_1156&inO=491 Wild APK1 panoramic camera] with tripod, yellow and orange filters and film holders, offered for sale at the [https://wlpa.auction2000.se/auk/w.ObjectList?inSiteLang=&inC=WLPA&inA=20141215_1156 28th Camera Auction] by Westlicht Photographica Auction (now [https://www.leitz-auction.com/auction/en/home Leitz Photographica Auction]), on 21 November 2015.</ref>
 
*APK1 panoramic camera, about 1970, making seven exposures on one 4x5-inch sheet of film. Wild 98.8 mm f/8 lens, with shutter speeds 1 - 1/500 second, plus 'B'.<ref>[https://wlpa.auction2000.se/auk/w.Object?inC=WLPA&inA=20141215_1156&inO=491 Wild APK1 panoramic camera] with tripod, yellow and orange filters and film holders, offered for sale at the [https://wlpa.auction2000.se/auk/w.ObjectList?inSiteLang=&inC=WLPA&inA=20141215_1156 28th Camera Auction] by Westlicht Photographica Auction (now [https://www.leitz-auction.com/auction/en/home Leitz Photographica Auction]), on 21 November 2015.</ref>
  
==lenses for arial photography==
+
==lenses for aerial photography==
 
*Falconar 1:1,4 f=9,8cm
 
*Falconar 1:1,4 f=9,8cm
 
*Aviogon, angle of view 90°
 
*Aviogon, angle of view 90°
 
*Super-Aviogon, angle of view 120°
 
*Super-Aviogon, angle of view 120°
 +
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>

Revision as of 20:25, 18 February 2021

Wild was an optical company based in Heerbrugg, Switzerland. It was founded in 1921 and made survey instruments and microscopes. It also made some camera lenses, mainly for aerial cameras.

ground-breaking developments

In 1946 the famous lens designer Ludwig Bertele moved to Switzerland and joined Wild, where he designed the revolutionary sharp wide-angle lenses Aviogon and Super Aviogon, both delivering image resolution 100 line-pairs/mm in the corners und 250 lp/mm in the center on an image frame of 18×18 cm, without any distortion. Optics like these made Swiss aerial cameras the benchmark for professional work in geo-photography. The Aviogons gave the model for Zeiss's Biogon, the first "super-wide angle lens" for 35mm film.[1]

merger

In 1962 Wild Heerbrugg took over the Leidolf camera factory and it was then used for manufacturing surveying equipment, including at least one camera. Wild Heerbrugg merged with Ernst Leitz in 1987, was renamed Wild Leitz AG in 1989, and became part of the Leica holding company in 1990. Today it is incorporated in Leica Geosystems, still based in Heerbrugg, but now separate from Leica Camera AG, and owned by the Swedish Hexagon group.[2]

cameras

  • APK1 panoramic camera, about 1970, making seven exposures on one 4x5-inch sheet of film. Wild 98.8 mm f/8 lens, with shutter speeds 1 - 1/500 second, plus 'B'.[3]

lenses for aerial photography

  • Falconar 1:1,4 f=9,8cm
  • Aviogon, angle of view 90°
  • Super-Aviogon, angle of view 120°

Notes

  1. history of Zeiss Biogon in German, on http://artaphot.ch [1]
  2. 'About Us' at Leica Geosystems.
  3. Wild APK1 panoramic camera with tripod, yellow and orange filters and film holders, offered for sale at the 28th Camera Auction by Westlicht Photographica Auction (now Leitz Photographica Auction), on 21 November 2015.