das Nettar das ist gut

Post war Nettar with f/6.3 lens

Toronto. Ahhh, “the Nettar – that is good”, as they say in Europe. Your collection should have at least one German folder. The Nettar, as it was known, was also called the BOB in Germany. It was a less expensive companion to the Ikonta line. Most models, unlike this one, were the traditional vertical designs. These cameras also competed with the Kodak varieties of folders.

Zeiss-Ikon manufactured and sold Nettars from the mid 1930s to the late 1950s. They came in a variety of versions and film sizes equipped with various lenses and shutters. This model was made post war from the look of it, and happens to be in a lot in our upcoming March 15th Auction – just saying (for those who want an inexpensive German folder for their collection).

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April in NYC

NY Photography Fair, April 4, 2020

Toronto. Just imagine! Going to the Big Apple (NYC) and having a chance to add to your collection while helping one of our exchange organizations! Each year in the Big Apple, the Daguerreian Society hosts the NY Photography Fair. While principally addressing daguerreotypes. tin types, and other old photos, the fair will also have collectible books, historical prints, and related materials.

If you can make it, come along to NYC this April 4th weekend and visit the show!

 

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a little less Horace …

April 19, 2020 London Show

Toronto. If you are not heading to the West coast in April, perhaps another show on the same date of April 19th will help.

About two hours west of here in London, Ontario, Maureen and Ron Tucker are hosting the “London Vintage Camera Show“.

Pop down and get some items for use or your collection or both!

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Horace said it best

Vancouver Camera Show April 19th, 2020

Toronto. The American New Yorker said, “Go West, young man…”, a recommendation recently repeated by Tonchi Martinic in his email on the Vancouver Camera Show.

So if you plan to visit Vancouver, or find yourself there in late April, enjoy the show as well as the ambiance and weather (we were there a couple of times two decades or so ago).

When you are at the show, you may find some items that nicely add to your collection, or help you in your photographic aspirations.  We often send out copies of our journal “Photographic Canadiana” and they disappear quickly.

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nailed it! March 15, 2020 DEFERRED!!!

PHSC Consignment Auction

Toronto. Auction time again. We hold our consignment auction March 15, 2020 at the usual location in Long Branch (SW Toronto to all readers).

IMPORTANT NOTICE: OUR AUTION THIS SUNDAY IS OFF AND DEFERRED UNTIL LATER THIS YEAR – PASS IT ON S.V.P.

Photos for our first few lots arrived around Valentine’s Day (give or take). Click on the sample image below and then on the thumbnail of the Diana camera (in its box) to see all the images. Click on any one image to see it full size. Use your computer’s arrows to move from one large image to another.

These and additional photos will be posted as soon as they arrive. If you need more details etc., click here or the AUCTION link above on the menu bar. Clicking the poster thumbnail at the top left will show a large size bookmark of the event.The third set of lot example photos just arrived this afternoon (Feb 21st) and have been added. And a fourth set of lot sample photos arrived very early today (March 4th) while I was recovering a balky 4 terabyte external drive nearly 3/4 full.  Another 8 lot photos came in tonight (March 6th). The next sample lot photos added March 10th. We now have some 45+ photos of sample lots for this coming auction (some lots appear single and in groups)!

Images from some of the March 15, 2020 Auction Lots

 

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red sails in the sunset

modern day Film in the late 19th century

Toronto. The energy of light depends on its wavelength. The higher (shorter) the wavelength, the more energetic the light. Visible light runs the gamut from reds to deep blues and purples. The beginnings of photography used media barely sensitive to blue light and totally insensitive to reds.

In fact, Jim Maxwell’s famous 1861 tri-colour photo of a tartan ribbon would have failed miserably except that the ribbon he chose used a red dye with a strong second harmonic placing all light reflected from the red dye in the sensitive range for wet plate emulsions. The use of a red filter gave a “red” result for this harmonic (if harmonics are not familiar to you, check out Fournier analysis). Throughout the 18th century, media remained insensitive to red light. The common red light for darkrooms was a result.

By the end of the end of the 18th century, Hermann Vogel discovered that adding certain dyes to the emulsion could extend the sensitive spectrum, first to green, then to orange, and later to red.  By about 1906, glass plates were offered commercially with the wider spectrum, but at a far higher cost – and their use demanded total darkness during development.

As a result, it was many decades before panchromatic film became the standard for B&W film. The exception was movie film where the higher cost was offset by far better results – especially in skin tones and sky shots. Minicams used mainly orthochromatic film which gave rise to the wide range of green and yellow filters. When it became available, infrared film prompted deep red filters. Of course polarizing filters would eliminate any specular reflections.

After the second world war, the proliferation of colour film ended any market for the old orthochromatic media.

NB, the title of this post is from a song of the same name published in 1935. This version was sung by the Platters.

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roll on

ROLLAPRINT ad from LIFE magazine

Toronto. George Dunbar threw a challenge the other day. He asked if anyone knew about or heard about the ROLLAPRINT system as advertised on page 4 in the May 26, 1961 issue of LIFE. It is full page so it must have cost a bundle!

From what I could learn, the system was made in France and imported to the States by the U.S. Photo Supply Co. of Washington D.C. The ROLLAPRINT system’s fresh egg was its ability to make copies of prints in 10 seconds for pennies each – and in room light at that. The system consisted of a fixed size enlarger to make 3-1/4  x 4-1/4 prints from 35mm negatives (Like the c1925 Leitz FILAR, etc. line), The ROLLAPRINT print copier and processor, 100 sheets of printing paper, and the developer and fixer/stabilizer bottles.

You could buy just the print copier and processor, or both it and the enlarger. The system was tested commercially in the USA late in 1960. Given its rapid disappearance and rarity here, suggests the system sold poorly in the stores. I remember the ads but not seeing the actual product although I was busy buying film gear in the early 1960s. Today there is very little on the internet of either the system or the importer.

The title for this post is the title of a song by Kid Rock – never heard the song before but it fits the post…

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so long Christie

Christie Blatchford and Louie Palu at Kandahar airport in 2006 by Jim MacDonald of the CTV

Toronto. I don’t often do a post on journalists, but Christie Blatchford is an exception. Here in the big smoke she is well known,  having worked for all four of the big dailies over the years. She was known by at least two of our speakers/members – the late Boris Spremo and Louie Palu, both newspaper photographers who covered world events.

Ms Blatchford succumbed to cancer  on February 12th  this year after a brief struggle. She was 68 years old. I first enjoyed her work when she was a columnist for the Globe.

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PHSC News for February 2020

Leica M9-P Special Edition

Toronto. The latest PHSC News newsletter (19-08) was sent out to all addresses on our MailChimp list. Another tasty issue skillfully prepared by editor Sonja Pushchak and her team.

Page 1 discusses an African-American photographer and his first of its kind cover for Vogue magazine. The article recognizes Black History Month which we celebrate in February. NB. the Hermès Leica kit goes for about $50k to those with deep pockets…

Page 2 introduces Victor Caratun of the Toronto Past Archive who is our speaker this month. And remembering Valentine’s day, Page 3 covers the notorious Valentine’s Day massacre in 1929 Chicago and its resulting social benefits. Following our Auction poster on p 4, we have the controversial Toronto File and its discussion of “green” background screens  in today’s world.

In the Equipment Review on p 6, our  friend and associate David Bridge shows the evolution of Kodak’s logo over a century and more. This is followed by Web Links on p 7 by David as an assist to wife Louise Freyburger (the enhanced “arrival ‘of a train” shows the amazing distance we have come since the early days of movies). NB. all links in the pdf work!

PHSC Events on p 8 tells you what we are up to these days while the Vi and Dot column takes over p 9 to discuss some commonality with Cabaret (I saw its predecessor, “I am a Camera”). And as usual. The Classifieds covers shows, cries for help, and books, all of interest to readers and PHSC members. Click here or on the Leica above to read or print this latest issue. Click on NEWSLETTER in the MENU BAR to see/print older issues.

 

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swingin’ at the seance

An early (earliest?) street scene in Paris by Daguerre (see George Gilbert’s talk in October, 1995)

Toronto. Did you ever notice that the earliest daguerreotypes where a bit odd? Street scenes showed vehicles or people as ghostly apparitions at best. And people shots were mostly very, very stiff, formal studio portraits. Scenes in motion or at work were almost none existent.

This was for good reason! The cameras, lenses and media of the day were extremely slow. Fast moving things in street scenes were hardly captured; moving things and work scenes were beyond the capability of most photographic practitioners. People usually appeared in studios where the cameras stood on heavy tripods and subjects sat on chairs within the iron grasp of head supports, etc.

The title of this post is from an old Glenn Miller piece I have. It is sung by Dorothy Claire (Marion Hutton was credited with singing the song back in March of 1941, and erroneously listed as the singer in the liner notes of my album). That December, the States entered WW2 and just three years later in mid-December of 1944, Glenn Miller was lost at sea in the English Channel when the airplane carrying him disappeared on its way to France.

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