1915
Aid to Photographic Art
With a new camera, invented and patented by an Elgin, Ill., man, a tall building may be photographed from the ground showing the upper portions as plainly as the lower. Such a building will be the exact size at the top as at the base of the picture. Formerly such a thing was considered impossible and photographers have been hunting some invention for the past twenty years to overcome the fault.
The inventor has many pictures of tall buildings taken from a distance of only a few feet which prove his invention worthy. The invention is simple and requires only the turning of the lens to the proper angle, which is determined by the height of the building and the distance which the camera stands from it.
—Saturday Blade, Chicago, Dec. 18, 1915, p. 9.
Tuesday, July 3, 2007
New Camera Takes Tall Buildings at Close Range
Labels:
1915,
buildings,
cameras,
Illinois,
inventions,
inventors,
photographs,
photography,
skyscrapers
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