JAMES LANCASTER & SONS, Birmingham

Details
JAMES LANCASTER & SONS, Birmingham
A 2 x 1½ inch Improved-pattern patent watch camera with nickel-plated body, six part sprung telescoping section, decoratively engraved cover engraved J. Lancaster & Sons, Birmingham. Patent., Grubb-type achromatic lens in a sprung brass drop shutter, rear ground glass retaining frame and two brass single dark slides.
Literature
Lothrop (1973), A century of cameras, p. 47.
Coe (1978), Cameras, p. 56.
Further details
See front cover illustration

Lot Essay

Lancaster's patent pocket camera was the subject of British patent number 12,571 of 4 October 1886. The camera first appeared in a commercial form in 1886 and from 1887 two sizes were sold. These corresonded to mens and ladies watches giving negatives of 2 x 1½ inches and 1½ x 1 inch respectively. The early models had simple rotary shutters which were turned by hand, these were replaced in 1890 by an Improved-pattern camera with a simple drop shutter. The Lancaster watch camera had disappeared from the British Journal Photographic Almanac by 1896.

More from Subminiature and Spy Cameras

View All
View All