Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Amateurs' Enlarging Camera No.1: S. Wing & Company

In Cameras > Box Cameras > Show & Tell and Cameras > Wood Cameras > Show & Tell.
oldpeep's loves1580 of 1668Guinness Toucan Painting by Gilroy: Original Study for a PosterVintage Cameras on Display
11
Love it
2
Like it

oldpeepoldpeep loves this.
aghcollectaghcollect loves this.
vetraio50vetraio50 loves this.
f64imagerf64imager loves this.
ManikinManikin loves this.
tom61375tom61375 loves this.
SEAN68SEAN68 loves this.
eroseerose loves this.
scottvezscottvez loves this.
officialfuelofficialfuel loves this.
JohnKratzJohnKratz loves this.
potreropotrero likes this.
wsvincentwsvincent likes this.
See 11 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 14 years ago

    rniederman
    (346 items)

    Something not often thought about is how images in the 19th century were enlarged. Today we take such things for granted, but prior to 1900 it wasn’t easy and the concept of enlarging negatives was relatively new in the 1880s.

    What looks like a fancy piece of polished furniture is actually a surprisingly beautiful c1890 “Amateur Enlarging Camera” by S. Wing and Company, Charlestown, Mass. The camera was designed to enlarge 4x5 inch negatives to 5x7 inch prints; or 2½ inch Kodak images to a 3½ inch circular image.

    As a side note, Kodak's famous "you press the button, we do the rest" marketing campaign was taking off like a rocket in the 1890s. The popularity of snapshots is probably the reason this enlarging camera was built.

    Aside from its rarity, Wing’s Amateur Enlarging Camera is exciting because it might represent the first attempt at a solid body design. Prior to this camera, ‘enlarging cameras’ (also known as process cameras) were complex, professional large bellows apparatus reaching over 6 feet in length. Yet by the 1920s, amateur, solid body enlargers were almost common.

    In contrast, Wing’s enlarging camera was strictly made for amateurs; and at about 26” in length, it was lightweight and extremely easy to use. Inside the finely crafted box is a lens tube affixed to a board in the middle. To make an enlargement, a 4x5 glass plate was held in place at one end by a pair of brass pins and a 5x7 sheet of film or paper was placed inside a holder at the opposite end. There was nothing else to do but expose the negative to a light source.

    As background, cameras made by Simon Wing are rare and highly prized by collectors worldwide. Wing first learned to make daguerreotypes at the age of twenty and became accomplished in other photographic processes throughout his career. However he is best known for a chain of studios and incredibly innovative multiplying cameras. Interestingly, Simon Wing also helped organize the Social Labor Party in 1892 and was its first presidential candidate. That year Grover Cleveland (D) won the election with over 5.5 million votes. According to two different sources, Simon Wing received a total of 21,000 or 70,000 votes.

    Refer to the following link to see a rare 4x5 field camera by Simon Wing: http://www.antiquewoodcameras.com/wingv.html

    logo
    Box Cameras
    See all
    Antique Camera Collection KODAK ADS 1886-1923 - MANY
    Antique Camera Collection KODAK ADS...
    $7
    1880's Rochester New Model Antique Wood Camera w/Orig. Glass Plate Holder & Case
    1880's Rochester New Model Antique ...
    $115
    KODAK ORIGINAL, WITH LENS PLUG AND WORN CASE/sse/223094
    KODAK ORIGINAL, WITH LENS PLUG AND ...
    $500
    BOX CAMERA VINTAGE 97-year-old ANSCO MEMO (1927 Type) CUSTOM EASTERN ROSEWOOD
    BOX CAMERA VINTAGE 97-year-old ANSC...
    $140
    logo
    Antique Camera Collection KODAK ADS 1886-1923 - MANY
    Antique Camera Collection KODAK ADS...
    $7
    See all

    Comments

    1. Glenn Spielman, 14 years ago
      I have a 1904 movie projector I would like to know more about the early 1900s projectors.
    2. rniederman rniederman, 14 years ago
      Hi Glenn; I haven't seen any collector guides or information specifically pertaining to early projectors, yet there are a handful of collectors that look for historically interesting examples. If you let me know the make and model, I can try to see if there is any info in my library. Thanks. - Rob
    3. rniederman rniederman, 12 years ago
      Thanks officialfuel and all!
    4. rniederman rniederman, 12 years ago
      Thanks, Scott!
    5. rniederman rniederman, 11 years ago
      Thanks, erose!
    6. rniederman rniederman, 11 years ago
      Thanks, Phil!
    7. rniederman rniederman, 11 years ago
      Thanks, tom61375!
    8. rniederman rniederman, 11 years ago
      Thanks, Manikin!
    9. rniederman rniederman, 10 years ago
      Thanks, vetraio50 and f64imager!
    10. rniederman rniederman, 10 years ago
      Thanks, aghcollect!
    11. rniederman rniederman, 7 years ago
      Thanks, oldpeep!

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.