-
three general types: the rail
camera, the
field camera, and
those that don't fit into the
other categories. The
bellows is a flexible, accordion-pleated...
-
folding photographic camera to be
varied is
called a
bellows. "
Bellows" is only used in plural. The Old
English name for "
bellows" was blǽstbęl(i)g, blást-bęl(i)g...
- In photography, a
bellows is the accordion-like,
pleated expandable part of a
camera,
usually a
large or
medium format camera, to
allow the lens to be...
-
included cameras of all
sizes and
makes plus many accessories. In 1912 Hugo
Schrader introduced the
first Plaubel Makina, a
compact bellows camera with a...
- lens-board
which is
connected to the body of the
camera by a light-tight
folding bellows. When the
camera is
fully unfolded it
provides the
correct focus...
-
sometimes called a copy camera. This is a
large bellows-type
camera which consists of the copy-board,
bellows and lens, and filmboard. The
vertical type can...
-
common types: the view
camera, with its
monorail and
field camera variants, and the
press camera. They have
extensible bellows with the lens and shutter...
- as 500
series (captiva), and spectra. The
original cameras folded into the body and used
bellows to
protect the
light path. The film was put on two spools...
-
transport like a
field camera: the
bellows are
compressed into the body, and the body
lowers into its base. In use, the
bellows can be
extended from 17...
-
snowflakes were too
complex to
record before they melted, so he
attached a
bellows camera to a
compound microscope and,
after much experimentation, photographed...