Kodak Panoram

Last updated
No.3A Panoram Kodak No.3A Panoram Kodak.png
No.3A Panoram Kodak

The Kodak Panoram camera was a roll-film swing-lens panoramic camera made in Rochester, New York, USA by Eastman Kodak between 1899 and 1928.

Contents

Background

While panoramic cameras had been developed as early as Friedrich Martens' construction of his Megaskop-Kamera in 1845, [1] they became broadly accessible only in the 1890s, a major obstacle was the use of flat glass plates being incompatible with the design of such cameras (though Martens devised curved Daguerreotype plates in his camera with a rotating lens, their display is made difficult by their shape).

This technical impasse was resolved with the invention of roll film in the 1880s. Eder [2] notes that "It was not until the invention of the flexible silver bromide films that [the panoramic camera] achieved the great success which it merits. The prototype of the Kodak Panoram camera, introduced with commercial success in 1900, is easily seen at first sight. The Kodak Panoram camera permits an instantaneous exposure over an extensive field of vision by an analogous turning of the lens and by a slit shutter passing in front of the film."

It was first shown at the Exposition in Paris, 1900." [3] In the year prior to the invention of Kodak's camera, the first mass-produced American panoramic camera, the Al-Vista, was introduced in 1898. In 1907, the German Ernemann company developed a "panorama-in-the-round camera" (Panorama-Rundkamera) with a 360-degree viewing angle. [4]

Design

The design of the Panoram was patented by Kodak Brownie designer Frank A. Brownell [5] and released as a series of models. [6] [7] [8] [9] It was about the size of a shoe-box and could be hand-held for shooting landscapes, [10] and Kodak described it as "a camera of few parts. Its operation is very simple and good pictures will be obtained from the beginning." [11]

The Panoram No.1 had a swinging Goerz Dagor lens housed in a light-proof leather tube which projected the image progressively during its scan onto flexible 120 film, [12] held against a back plate curved to match the trajectory of the lens. Focus was fixed and the camera intended to render objects sharp only if over 7m (20 feet) into the scene. [11] The swinging mechanism through which the image was transmitted by a rear slit, and with the lens tube not pointing at the film at either end of its travel; were mechanisms which constituted the shutter, which had two settings; "fast" and "slow", the latter being used for most situations except for "views at the seashore, on the water, and for very distant views when the sunlight is unusually bright." [11]

A fold-down door covered the lens when not in use, except on Model 4. Framing was achieved using a brilliant finder mounted centrally on the top-front edge - some with a cover providing a mirror for eye-level use, supplemented by V-shaped sighting-lines across the top of the camera. A spirit level at the viewfinder aligned the shot with the horizon line. The No.1 captured 120º field of view, and produced negatives [13] 5.71 cm H x 17.78 cm W . [14] Model 3A used the 6-exposure 122 sized film roll for 3 shots and the 10-exposure roll for 5. The No.4 encompassed 142º on size 103 negatives, [15] each frame being 8.89 cm H x 30.48 cm W. [16]

Pricing

At the turn of the century Fred E. Munsey & Co in Los Angeles was advertising Panoram models at US$8 and US$26 for No.1 and No.4 Panoram models respectively (equivalent to about $252.26 and $819.86 in 2021); [17] little more expensive than the Folding Pocket Kodaks. In the United Kingdom in 1913 "Universal Providers" William Whitely Ltd., of Queens Rd in London offered the No.1 model at £2 10 0, and the No.4 £3 10 0 (£297.40 in 2020) and described the camera;

"Takes marvellously realistic pictures of broad stretches of landscape and seascape, open spaces in cities, squares. etc. Large groups of people, reviews, regattas, etc.. are all most vividly recorded by the Panoram Kodak. When held vertically, most artistic panel pictures are obtainable, such as waterfalls, mountains. etc. Simplicity itself. Loaded and Unloaded in Daylight." [18]

Users

Anthony Fiala (March 1905) 82 N. Latitude, panorama shot during the unsuccessful Ziegler polar expedition of 1903-1905 82northe.jpg
Anthony Fiala (March 1905) 82 N. Latitude, panorama shot during the unsuccessful Ziegler polar expedition of 1903-1905
Alexander Iyas (c.1901-1911) Iyas and his Cossack Escort, Turbat-i Haydari, photographed with Kodak Panoram camera Alexander Iyas (c.1901-1911) Iyas and his Cossack Escort, Turbat-i Haydari.jpg
Alexander Iyas (c.1901–1911) Iyas and his Cossack Escort, Turbat-i Haydari , photographed with Kodak Panoram camera
Melvin Vaniman (1904) Panorama of Sydney from a balloon Panorama of Sydney from a balloon, 1904 -by Melvin Vaniman (32002322360).jpg
Melvin Vaniman (1904) Panorama of Sydney from a balloon

Being portable and simple in operation, with the added advantage of storing a number of panoramas on a film roll, the Panoram was quickly taken up by innovative photographers for both recording and artistic purposes.

Charles J. Kleingrothe's turn-of-the-century photographs of Sumatran Dutch East Indies were made with the Panoram, and are considered key visual records of colonial Peninsular Malaya, especially of its tin-mining and rubber industries. [19] Anthony Fiala (1869-1950) depicted the 1901 Baldwin Ziegler Expedition and Ziegler Polar Expedition of 1903-5 efforts to be the first to reach the North Pole; his images are taken with large format still cameras and the then new Kodak No. 1 Panoram camera. [20] [21]

The Finn, Alexander Ivanovitch Iyas, the Tsar's consul in Persia 1901–1914, photographed the region, and on 26 February 1904 used the Panoram to photograph the arrival of the Carnegie Institute Expedition to Eastern Persia. He was shot and beheaded in an attack by Turkish troops on 29 December 1914 and by coincidence, at the battle of Sufyan, on a fallen Turkish officer were found Iyas's negatives, which were sent to Iyas's mother. In 1915 Vladimir Minorsky organised a small exhibition of his photographs at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in St Petersburg. His work remained forgotten for a century. [22]

The panoramic camera was used in the 1921 reconnaissance of Mount Everest; [23] also by Pictorialist and postcard publisher Robert Vere Scott; and by adventurers like Melvin Vaniman, and archaeologist Hiram Bingham III. [24] Bingham, having first seen Machu Picchu in 1911, for his 1912 expedition wrote to George Eastman, who was to supply his photographic equipment;

"...it would be extremely advisable to have one Panoram Kodak in the outfit ... Can you give me some advice on this? ... In many of the deep canyons where we are expecting to work, it needs a Panoram Kodak to show the opposite side of the mountain up to the top .... If you can give us three new 3A Specials, and one No. 4 Panoram we shall have nine Kodaks in the outfit and ought to be well equipped for the scientific work that lies ahead of us." [25]

In World War I, Ernest Brooks and Canadian official war photographer, the Daily Mirror photojournalist William Rider-Rider both used the Panoram No.4. [26] [27] Even at mid-century the Panoram was being used; Josef Sudek started photographing with it in 1948 after being given one as a gift from friends, and commissioned by Jan Řesáč to photograph Prague for a book, he produced his one of his most famous publications, Praha panoramaticka ("Prague Panoramic"), devoted to the format, though it was not published until 1959. [28]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">35 mm movie film</span> Standard theatrical motion picture film gauge

35 mm film is a film gauge used in filmmaking, and the film standard. In motion pictures that record on film, 35 mm is the most commonly used gauge. The name of the gauge is not a direct measurement, and refers to the nominal width of the 35 mm format photographic film, which consists of strips 1.377 ± 0.001 inches (34.976 ± 0.025 mm) wide. The standard image exposure length on 35 mm for movies is four perforations per frame along both edges, which results in 16 frames per foot of film.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kodak</span> American photographic and film company

The Eastman Kodak Company, referred to simply as Kodak, is an American public company that produces various products related to its historic basis in film photography. The company is headquartered in Rochester, New York, and is incorporated in New Jersey. It is best known for photographic film products, which it brought to a mass market for the first time.

The following list comprises significant milestones in the development of photography technology.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">George Eastman</span> American entrepreneur, inventor, and photographer (1854–1932)

George Eastman was an American entrepreneur who founded the Eastman Kodak Company and helped to bring the photographic use of roll film into the mainstream. After a decade of experiments in photography, he patented and sold a roll film camera, making amateur photography accessible to the general public for the first time. Working as the treasurer and later president of Kodak, he oversaw the expansion of the company and the film industry.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Speed Graphic</span> Press cameras made by Graflex from 1912 to 1973

The Speed Graphic was a press camera produced by Graflex in Rochester, New York. Although the first Speed Graphic cameras were produced in 1912, production of later versions continued until 1973; with significant improvements occurring in 1947 with the introduction of the Pacemaker Speed Graphic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">135 film</span> Photographic film format

135 film, more popularly referred to as 35 mm film or 35 mm, is a format of photographic film used for still photography. It is a film with a film gauge of 35 mm (1.4 in) loaded into a standardized type of magazine – also referred to as a cassette or cartridge – for use in 135 film cameras. The engineering standard for this film is controlled by ISO 1007 titled '135-size film and magazine'.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Advanced Photo System</span> Still image film format

Advanced Photo System (APS) is a discontinued film format for still photography first produced in 1996. It was marketed by Eastman Kodak under the brand name Advantix, by FujiFilm under the name Nexia, by Agfa under the name Futura and by Konica as Centuria.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Panorama</span> Wide-angle view or representation of a physical space

A panorama is any wide-angle view or representation of a physical space, whether in painting, drawing, photography, film, seismic images, or 3D modeling. The word was coined in the 18th century by the English painter Robert Barker to describe his panoramic paintings of Edinburgh and London. The motion-picture term panning is derived from panorama.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kodak Brownie</span> Series of photo cameras

The Brownie was a series of camera models made by Eastman Kodak and first released in 1900.

The Instamatic is a series of inexpensive, easy-to-load 126 and 110 cameras made by Kodak beginning in 1963. The Instamatic was immensely successful, introducing a generation to low-cost photography and spawning numerous imitators.

Panoramic photography is a technique of photography, using specialized equipment or software, that captures images with horizontally elongated fields of view. It is sometimes known as wide format photography. The term has also been applied to a photograph that is cropped to a relatively wide aspect ratio, like the familiar letterbox format in wide-screen video.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Color photography</span> Photography that reproduces colors

Color photography is a type of photography that uses media capable of capturing and reproducing colors. By contrast, black-and-white or gray-monochrome photography records only a single channel of luminance (brightness) and uses media capable only of showing shades of gray.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Graflex</span> American camera manufacturer (1887-1973)

Graflex was a manufacturer that gave its brand name to several models of camera.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Enlarger</span> Specialized transparency projector

An enlarger is a specialized transparency projector used to produce photographic prints from film or glass negatives, or from transparencies.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of the camera</span> Review of the topic

The history of the camera began even before the introduction of photography. Cameras evolved from the camera obscura through many generations of photographic technology – daguerreotypes, calotypes, dry plates, film – to the modern day with digital cameras and camera phones.

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to photography:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cirkut (camera)</span>

The Cirkut is a rotating panoramic camera, of the type known as "full rotation". It was patented by William J. Johnston in 1904, and was manufactured by Rochester Panoramic Camera Company starting in 1905; during that same year, the company was acquired by the Century Camera Co.. Manufacture of the camera continued through 1949.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">You Press the Button, We Do the Rest</span> Kodak slogan

"You Press the Button, We Do the Rest" was an advertising slogan coined by George Eastman, the founder of Kodak, in 1888. Eastman believed in making photography available to the world, and making it possible for anyone who had the desire to take great pictures. Until then, taking photographs was a complicated process that could only be accomplished if the photographer could process and develop film. With his new slogan, Eastman and the Eastman Kodak Company became wildly successful and helped make photography popular.

The practice and appreciation of photographyin the United States began in the 19th century, when various advances in the development of photography took place and after daguerreotype photography was introduced in France in 1839. The earliest commercialization of photography was made in the country when Alexander Walcott and John Johnson opened the first commercial portrait gallery in 1840. In 1866, the first color photograph was taken. Only in the 1880s, would photography expand to a mass audience with the first easy-to-use, lightweight Kodak camera, issued by George Eastman and his company.

Robert Vere Scott (1877, Brisbane –c.1944 United States of America) was an Australian Pictorialist photographer known for his panoramic views. From 1918 he lived and worked in the United States, where he died sometime in the 1940s.

References

  1. Encyclopedia of nineteenth-century photography. John Hannavy. New York: Routledge. 2008. ISBN   978-0-415-97235-2. OCLC   123968757.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  2. Josef Maria Eder (1978), History of photographyPaperback, New York Dover Publications, ISBN   978-0-486-23586-8
  3. Jahrbuch f. Phot., 1901, p. 159
  4. Paeslack, M. (2019). Constructing Imperial Berlin: Photography and the Metropolis. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press
  5. Brayer, Elizabeth (2006), George Eastman : a biography, University of Rochester Press, p. 84, ISBN   978-1-58046-247-1
  6. US 693583,Brownell, Frank A.,"Shutter for photographic cameras",published 1902-02-18, assigned to Eastman Kodak Co.
  7. US 699161,Forsheim, Joseph,"Panoramic camera",published 1902-05-06, assigned to Eastman Kodak Co.
  8. Price guide to antique and classic cameras, eleventh edition, 2001-2002. James M. McKeown, Joan C. McKeown (11th ed.). Grantsburg, Wis.: Centennial Photo Service. 2001. ISBN   0-931838-33-9. OCLC   46691269.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  9. Coe, Brian (1978). Cameras : from Daguerreotypes to instant pictures. New York: Crown Publishers. pp. 171, 175. ISBN   0-517-53381-2. OCLC   3730724.
  10. Emily J. Minor, "Then & Now", The Palm Beach Post (West Palm Beach, Florida) Sunday 24 Mar 1996, p.61
  11. 1 2 3 Eastman Kodak Company (1903). The Panoram-Kodak no. 4 : instruction book. Getty Research Institute. Rochester, N.Y. : Eastman Kodak.
  12. "37 Photographic or cinematographic goods: United Kingdom". 2021. doi:10.1787/8d1c5074-en.{{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  13. Warren, Lyn (2006). Encyclopedia of twentieth-century photography. Lynne Warren. New York: Routledge. p. 1194. ISBN   978-0-203-94338-0. OCLC   190846013.
  14. Scott, R. Vere (1901), Camels and men gather at the start of the expedition to survey the Trans-Australian Railway , retrieved 2021-05-01
  15. Schnei, J. (1992). Does your classic camera suffer from defunct-film-size syndrome? Not anymore. Popular Photography (00324582), 99(7), 30.
  16. The photographic collector, Bishopsgate Press, 1982, pp. 150–151, ISSN   0260-5155
  17. "$26 in 1900 → 2021 | Inflation Calculator". www.in2013dollars.com. Retrieved 2021-05-04.
  18. William Whitely Ltd., Queens Rd London General Price List, Foreign Edition, Section II October, 1913. (1913). United Kingdom, p. 1121
  19. Tan, B. (2010). Early Tourist Guidebooks: The Illustrated Guide to the Federated Malay States. BiblioAsia.
  20. Siebel, Heddi Vaughan (2020). "Anthony Fiala: The First Films of the Polar Regions, 1901–1905". Film History: An International Journal. 32 (4): 91–118. doi:10.2979/filmhistory.32.4.04. S2CID   235019658. Project MUSE   780979.
  21. Fiala, Anthony (December 2012). "Myhre's Tomb on Cape Saulen". Harvard Review (43): 141–142. Gale   A323146190.
  22. Rhodes, Fred (October 2006). "Images from the Endgame: Persia Through a Russian Lens 1901-1914". The Middle East (371): 65–66. Gale   A152761612.
  23. Mallory, George Leigh (February 1922). "Mount Everest: The Reconnaissance". The Geographical Journal. 59 (2): 100–109. doi:10.2307/1781387. JSTOR   1781387.
  24. Thomson, Hugh (July 2011). "Finding the Lost City: this month marks the 100th anniversary of Hiram Bingham's 'discovery' of Machu Picchu. Hugh Thomson tells the tale of how a US explorer and academic came to uncover one of the greatest architectural achievements of pre-Columbian civilisation". Geographical. 83 (7): 46–52. Gale   A262883326.
  25. Cox Hall, Amy (2017). Framing a Lost City. doi:10.7560/313671. ISBN   978-1-4773-1369-5.[ page needed ]
  26. Carmichael, Jane (1989). First World War photographers. Oxfordshire. ISBN   978-1-136-09276-3. OCLC   1059513883.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  27. Grimshaw, V. (2017, Jul 30). Hero who showed war's true horror. The People ProQuest   1924333147
  28. Josef Sudek (1959) Praha panoramaticka. Prague: Státní nakladatelství krásné literatury, hudby a umění, Orbis

Further reading