Accession No
1046
Brief Description
Dr. Brewster's patent kaleidoscope, by P. Carpenter, English, 1850 (c)
Origin
England
Maker
Carpenter, Philip
Class
optical
Earliest Date
1850
Latest Date
1850
Inscription Date
Material
metal (silver, brass, white metal); glass; wood; hide (vellum); cloth (velvet, silk)
Dimensions
length 169mm; diameter of objective 37mm; box length 182mm; breadth 95mm; height 50mm
Special Collection
Robert Whipple collection
Provenance
Donated by Robert S. Whipple, 1951. Purchased from the estate of T.H. Court, 1951.
Inscription
‘DR. BREWSTERS PATENT KALEIDOSCOPE’ (objective and lid of box)
‘P. CARPENTER SOLE MAKER’ (eyepiece)
Description Notes
Telescope with single silver draw tube. Body with rust coloured painted finish. Fitted wooden box containing 12 silver-mounted objectives, one empty objective and two lens covers - one with lens (for use without objective). Box with vellum cover and lined with green velvet and green silk. White metal hinges and gold-painted lock (no key).
Condition fair (cracking on body of telescope; tarnishing to silver); complete.
References
Events
Description
The kaleidoscope takes its name from the Greek kalos – beautiful, eidos – form, skopeo – to see. It was invented by Sir David Brewster in 1816 as an off-shoot of his research into the polarisation of light.
Brewster became interested in the multiplied images which occurred when reflecting plates of glass were inclined at a small angle to each other. Beautiful symmetrical forms would result if the angle of the mirrors formed a segment of a circle such that the total number of segments in the circle would be even. (see drawing).
Brewster designed an instrument consisting of two angled mirrors in a tube, with a rotating slide filled with bits of coloured glass next to the mirrors and an eyepiece at the other end of the tube.
The telescopic kaleidoscope contains instead of the slide a convex lens so that the images of distant things can be focussed at the end of the mirrors. Thus any object can make a multiplied pattern: Brewster suggested viewing a blazing fire to create ‘the most magical fireworks’.
The kaleidoscope had little practical use but it became a popular novelty plaything. Kaleidoscope images, projected using a magic lantern, delighted nineteenth century audiences.
Today, the kaleidoscope retains its popularity as a children’s toy, and also as an artistic tool in the form of computer-generated art, which is often based on kaleidoscopic patterns.
01/02/2001
Created by: Jenny Downes on 01/02/2001
FM:40106
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