Accession No
5878
Brief Description
stereoscope in wooden box with accessories, by J. M. G. and Sons Ltd., English, mid-20th Century
Origin
England
Maker
J. M. G. and Sons Ltd. Moore and Wright
Class
optical
Earliest Date
1950
Latest Date
1980
Inscription Date
Material
wood; metal; cloth (felt, elastic); organic (hair); hide (leather)
Dimensions
box: length 460mm, width 120mm, depth 80mm
Special Collection
Provenance
Transferred from the Earth Sciences Department on 14/10/2002. Made for the Geology Department (now called Earth Sciences) by the Engineering Department.
Inscription
on brass plate on lid of box;
STEREOSCOPE UNIVERSAL
BAR-PARALLAX
J.M.G. & SONS LTD
B.1634
on stereoscope;
J.M.G. & SONS LTD
B.1634
STEREOSCOPE UNIVERSAL
BAR-PARALLAX
on rotating part;
MOORE & WRIGHT SHEFFIELD
ENGLAND
Description Notes
stereoscope in wooden box with accessories by J.M.G & Sons Ltd. Box is well padded inside with green felt material. Accessories included are a spanner, brush, chamois leather and three glass plates (two are kept in a seperate compartment in the lid). The key to the box is also kept inside the box. The instrument itself consists of two glass plates that rotate together and independently. One part is made by a different company as inscribed on it (Moore & Wright Sheffield, England).
References
Events
Description
Stereoscope
Sir Charles Wheatstone, 1838 (popularised by Oliver Wendell Holmes, 1881)
The graphoscope resembled the common magnifying glasses in many ways. It was usually composed of a single lens that served to magnify whatever small picture was placed on the easel. Later versions, called stereographoscopes, had two or three lenses and allowed people to see stereographic views. These optical toy’s names were derived from the Greek 'scope' for viewing.
Stereoscopes were one of the most popular forms of entertainment in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Wheatstone had experimented with simple stereoscopic drawings in 1832, several years before photography was invented. Later, the two principles were combined to form the stereoscope.
A stereoscope is composed of two pictures mounted next to each other, and a set of lenses to view the pictures through. Each picture is taken from a slightly different viewpoint that corresponds closely to the spacing of the eyes. The left picture represents what the left eye would see, and likewise for the right picture. Early stereo photographs were taken with a camera mounted on a tripod with a sliding bar. Once the first picture was taken and a new photographic plate was inserted, the camera was moved about 7 cm along the bar (approximately adult eye spacing). Then, the second picture was taken. When observing the pictures through a special viewer, the pair of two-dimensional pictures merge together into a single three-dimensional photograph. This phenomenon had been known for quite some time, ever since the ancient Greek mathematician Euclid discovered the principles of binocular vision.
FM:46319
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