| No.3 Combination Hawk-Eye, C.1904 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Blair Camera Company |
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The Blair No.3 Combination Hawk-Eye is a scarce folding- bellows camera that was successor to the earlier Blair Focusing Weno Hawk-Eye (c1902). The Combination Hawk-Eye is similar to the better known No.4 Screen Focus Kodak in which the rollfilm back hinges up for composing and focusing an image on a ground glass carrier. In addition, the rollfilm back could be completely removed and the camera used exclusively with glass plates. The No.3 is the smallest of the combination cameras using 118 film for 3-1/4 x 4-1/4" exposures. Combination cameras are extremely awkward to use and visually quite strange - especially when set up to use the ground glass as a composing and critical focusing aid. These cameras may have been design experiments reacting to the shift in popularity from dry-plates to rollfilm systems in the 1890s. The likely benefit was that a photographer could buy one camera for both worlds. Owing to the scarcity of combination cameras, the important amateur photographer market must not have embraced the "one-camera / both worlds" concept. Several manufacturers offered cameras that could use both rollfilm and dry-plates before Blair introduced their smaller combination cameras. Examples include the 1893 No.4 Folding Kodak (Improved version), the Blair Hawk-Eye Detective Camera (with accessory rollfilm carrier), and rollfilm cameras such as the No.4 Cartridge Kodak (with accessory dry-plate back). So what makes the Blair Focusing Weno Hawk-Eye and Combination Hawk-Eye historically interesting? |
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| No.3 Combination Hawk-Eye shown with the rollfilm holder in the upright position for plate use. |
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| Blair combination cameras were the first self-casing, folding-bellows outfits that did not require the rollfilm back to be removed. Although primarily rollfilm cameras, they could convert to dry-plates midway through a roll of film or use the ground glass as a rollfilm focusing aid without having to swap backs (or external rollfilm carriers). The conversion process was convenient because the rollfilm back stayed attached to the camera. However the No.4 Screen Focus Kodak had a slightly better design, allowing its ground glass carrier and dark slide to be stored inside the rollfilm back when not in use. At $27.50 (or about $521 in year 2000 currency), the newly introduced Combination Hawk-Eye was advertised for a substantially lower price than the $87.50 No.4 Screen Focus Kodak. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Go To The Blair No.3 Combination Hawk-Eye Reference Page | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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