Difference between revisions of "Stereoscope"
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{{Thing | {{Thing | ||
|Type of thing=Domestic | |Type of thing=Domestic | ||
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|Current location=Mallala Museum | |Current location=Mallala Museum | ||
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| − | '' | + | From 1840-1920 the stereoscopes as illustrated provided a form of entertainment in the home and the viewers became armchair tourists with many of the cards displaying a range of worldwide photographs of scenes and buildings. |
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| + | The stereoscope is a device which enables stereographs to be put into position and then when the pictures are viewedthey can be seen as a simulated 3D image.<span style="font-style: italic;" />''<br>'' | ||
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| + | In America the doctor and writer Oliver Wendell Holmes invented a handheld device for viewing stereographs Ultimately the stereoscope ranged from the small hand held item to a large piece of furniture that could display a changing display of up to 100- stereographs. | ||
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| + | It was at the Great Exhibition 1851 that stereographs were introduced to the public The praise from Queen Victoria and the great interest shown by the public inspired the London Stereoscopic Company to develop the mass production of stereographs and between 1854-1856 over half a million stereographs were sold. | ||
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Revision as of 00:13, 7 April 2010
| Type of thing | Domestic
|
| Place used | In the home |
| Current location | Mallala Museum
|
Contents
From 1840-1920 the stereoscopes as illustrated provided a form of entertainment in the home and the viewers became armchair tourists with many of the cards displaying a range of worldwide photographs of scenes and buildings.
The stereoscope is a device which enables stereographs to be put into position and then when the pictures are viewedthey can be seen as a simulated 3D image.<span style="font-style: italic;" />
In America the doctor and writer Oliver Wendell Holmes invented a handheld device for viewing stereographs Ultimately the stereoscope ranged from the small hand held item to a large piece of furniture that could display a changing display of up to 100- stereographs.
It was at the Great Exhibition 1851 that stereographs were introduced to the public The praise from Queen Victoria and the great interest shown by the public inspired the London Stereoscopic Company to develop the mass production of stereographs and between 1854-1856 over half a million stereographs were sold.
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