Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Bellieni

H. Bellieni et Fils was a camera maker in Nancy, France, from the late nineteenth century until the early twentieth century. Several jumelle-type cameras, including stereo models, are known to have been produced from the mid-1890s to 1905;[1] older, wooden-bodied cameras are also seen.

The firm was founded by Henri Bellieni (1857–1938).

Cameras

  • Wooden strut-folding cameras for plates, including 9×12 cm and 13×18 cm, about 1889. These have no shutter; one of the examples was sold with a Thornton-Pickard shutter, fitting in front of the lens.[2][3]
  • Folding 9×18 cm stereo camera, about 1893.[4]
  • Folding 9×18 cm stereo tailboard camera (a Chambre de voyages or Reisekamera), about 1900.[5]
  • Jumelle Simple: leather-covered wooden jumelle camera for 9×12 cm plates.[6]
  • Jumelle Simple à 2 Objectives.
  • Jumelle Universelle.
  • Stereo-Jumelle.
  • Metal-bodied strut-folding camera, about 1905.[7]

Notes

  1. ^ McKeown, James M.; Joan C., McKeown (2004). McKeown's Price Guide to Antique and Classic Cameras (12th ed.). Grantsburg, Wisc.: Centennial Photo Service. pp. 123–124. ISBN 0-931838-40-1.
  2. ^ Wooden strut-folding camera[permanent dead link] for 9×12 cm plates, about 1889, with 136 mm f/8 Krauss-Zeiss Anastigmat, sold at the May 2007 Westlicht Photographica Auction in Vienna.
  3. ^ Wooden strut-folding camera[permanent dead link] for 13×18 cm plates, about 1889, with 195 m f/7.2 CZJ Anastigmat and Watson finder (also apparently usable as an eye-level finder), sold at the December 2009 Westlicht auction. The camera has front shift.
  4. ^ Folding, wooden-bodied stereo camera[dead link] for 9×18 cm plates, about 1893, with Derogy Extra-Rapide Rectilignes lenses and adjustable guillotine shutter, sold at the November 2002 Westlicht auction Archived March 18, 2005, at the Wayback Machine.
  5. ^ Bellieni stereo tailboard camera[permanent dead link] for 9×18 cm plates, about 1900, with 11 cm CZJ Anastigmat lenses, sold at the May 2011 Westlicht auction.
  6. ^ 9×12 cm Jumelle Simple, about 1896, with 136 mm f/8 CZJ Protar, five-speed shutter, front rise and shift and Newton finder (adjustable for rise and shift); sold in November 2011 by Fullers LLC in Philadelphia.
  7. ^ Metal strut-folding camera[permanent dead link] for 10×15 cm plates, about 1905, with SOM Berthiot 165 mm f/4.5 Flor lens and dial-set Compur shutter with speeds 1 - 1/150 second plus 'B' and 'T', sold at the December 2009 Westlicht auction. The camera has a large frame finder (as well as ground-glass focusing) and front rise and shift.