p-cameras-msg - 10/28/05 Notes on period camera obscura. NOTE: See also the files: cameras-msg, glasswork-msg, painting-msg, medieval-tech-msg. ************************************************************************ NOTICE - This file is a collection of various messages having a common theme that I have collected from my reading of the various computer networks. Some messages date back to 1989, some may be as recent as yesterday. This file is part of a collection of files called Stefan's Florilegium. These files are available on the Internet at: http://www.florilegium.org I have done a limited amount of editing. Messages having to do with separate topics were sometimes split into different files and sometimes extraneous information was removed. For instance, the message IDs were removed to save space and remove clutter. The comments made in these messages are not necessarily my viewpoints. I make no claims as to the accuracy of the information given by the individual authors. Please respect the time and efforts of those who have written these messages. The copyright status of these messages is unclear at this time. If information is published from these messages, please give credit to the originator(s). Thank you, Mark S. Harris AKA: THLord Stefan li Rous Stefan at florilegium.org ************************************************************************ Newsgroups: rec.org.sca From: tabron at binah.cc.brandeis.edu Subject: Re: xxx Organization: Brandeis University Date: Sun, 13 Jun 1993 20:13:39 GMT whheydt at pbhya.PacBell.COM (Wilson Heydt) writes: >Conal Blackhawke of Martinhoe writes: >>We all know (more or less) the evolution of the camera, so it is safe to >>say that it's most definitely not a period tool. The only exception is the >>type I've seen used in the Flintstone cartoons, but I've never been able to >>locate one. > >Kind of depends on what you mean by camera... Not only is the >original "camera obscura" late period, but the application of a lens >to the structure is just within period. Porta did it in (if memory >serves) 1598. That sort of camera, however is two rooms. (Which >interesting enough, makes really *large* cameras far closer to period >than small ones, leading to....) > > --Hal > > Hal Ravn, West Kingdom > Wilson H. Heydt, Jr., Albany, CA 94706, 510/524-8321 (home) The first documented case of a camera obscura being used, as far as my research indicates, is that of Fillipo Brunelleschi in 1425. (For an interesting discussion see Shigeru Tsuji, "Brunelleschi and the camera obscura: the discovery of pictorial perspective", _Art History_ vol. 13, Sep. 1990, pp. 276-292.) There may still be some debate about whether Brunelleschi used a camera obscura but to my mind his argument is convincing. James Snyder (author of _Medieval Art_ and _Northern Renaissance Art_) has said that camera obscuras were quite popular with landscape painters right around the time of Rembrandt, which would be quite in period. Raedwynne aet thaem Grene Wudu Dark Horde ------------------ Judith Tabron Dept. of English and American Literature Brandeis University tabron at binah.cc.brandeis.edu From: djheydt at uclink.berkeley.edu (Dorothy J Heydt) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Lenses and telescopes Date: 21 Jul 1994 21:49:27 GMT Organization: University of California, Berkeley (Hal posting from Dorothy's account...) Michael Moore wrote: >Perhaps binoculars and telescopes are more alike than I think. >However, there seems to me a difference in distance between the miles to >the horizon and the miles to the nearest night star... Using the data as is normally done for cameras..... When a lens is focused at "infinity", the optical center of the lens is at it's closest to the film plane. If you examine any camera lens with focus distance marking (a thing that is getting rarer by the day), you will see that the scale is non-linear. The practical difference in focusing between an object a mile away and an object light-years away is too small for any practical purpose. This is complicated by a lens characteristic called "hyper-focal distance." This is the distance to an object in critical focus in which everything from one-half the hyperfocal distance to infinity is acceptably sharp. This distance depends on focal length of the lens and aperture. If one considers a telescope like the first ones that Galileo made--usually quoted in the range of 3 to 20 power--one might assume a focal length around 500mm and an aperture no better than F10. Such a device will have a hyperfocal distance of no more than a few hundred feet, and under some assumptions it might well be no more than 50 feet. For what its worth, lenses were incorporated in camera obscurae in 1598. --Hal Ravn (Hal Heydt) From: djheydt at uclink.berkeley.edu (Dorothy J Heydt) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Magic Lantern help Date: 11 Dec 1994 19:17:07 GMT Organization: University of California, Berkeley [Hal posting from Dorothy's account...] Ferret wrote: >Does anyone have information on camera obscuras and magic lanterns ? >Plans or books. So far as I know "magic lanterns" are completely out of period. As for the camera obscura... Depends on what form of it you mean. The period ones (invented by an Italian born in 1540) consist of two rooms with, at first, a small hole bewteen them. The room with the subject would be brightly lit, while the room with the artist would be quite dark. Using a lens in the opening between the two rooms is documentable to 1598--just barely period. --Hal Ravn (Hal Heydt) From: ae766 at yfn.ysu.edu (David Sanders) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Camera Obscura, and related Date: 1 Jun 1995 11:52:44 GMT Organization: St. Elizabeth Hospital, Youngstown, OH Greetings all, from Vajk! A while back someone asked about construction of a camera obscura. At the time I had little in the way of suggestions, even though I had been looking for such myself. However, this past week I came upon a *great* work. Hermann Hecht, Pre-Cinema History. An Encyclopaedia and Annotated Bibliography of the Moving Image Before 1896 (London: Bowker-Saur, 1993). It is "Published in Association with the British Film Institute". The earliest work mentioned that I have found on cursory examination is from the 1st century BC. There are many from the 16th century, and some from the 15th century and before. One must really read through some of the entries to get a real feel for what this bibliography is all about. Vajk ae766 at yfn.ysu.edu From: ae766 at yfn.ysu.edu (David Sanders) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Camera Obscura, and related Date: 5 Jun 1995 12:00:16 GMT Organization: St. Elizabeth Hospital, Youngstown, OH In a previous article, dickeney at access2.digex.net (Dick Eney) says: >What is its ISBN, my lord? Without this bookstores are reluctant to >order a book from England. (And when we're over there in August it'll be >handy to use in searching British bookstores, for that matter...) You know, I looked in vain for an ISBN. But now I have found it. Not in the usual places. It appears on the bar code on the back of the book. ISBN 1-8539-056-3 Also, Bowker Saur appears to have offices in London, Melbourne, Munich, and New Jersey (no city listed). Vajk ae766 at yfn.ysu.edu From: polsons at cruzio.com (The Polsons) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Camera Obscura, and related Date: Sun, 04 Jun 1995 17:06:22 -0800 Organization: sirius.com Just wondering if anyone else has seen the camera obscura that operates in San Francisco, CA? We happened upon it at The Cliff House, a restaurant and tourist spot just north of Golden Gate park right along the ocean. If you can figure out how to get there, it's worth the admission! You can see how it works and get a brochure about it too...! ********************************************************* Willow Polson, Editor polsons at sirius.com Recreating History Magazine "The Resource for Living History Enthusiasts of All Eras" ********************************************************* Subject: Camera Date: Sat, 20 Dec 1997 20:53:51 -0500 From: rmhowe Organization: Windmaster's Hill, Atlantia, and the GDH To: RowenRhys > 'Tis true that camera date to the time of the American Civil War > Rowen ferch Rhys Actually the term camera dates to renaissance times. It refers to the "camera obscura", Italian for Dark Room. It was a tent like a little round pavillion. In the middle of the roof was a hole with a lens in it, above this was a mirror mounted at 45 degrees. The whole thing operated much like a periscope. In the dark tent there was a table with a light surface. The light would strike the mirror, be focused through the lens, and strike the table and one would see the first moving pictures. "The trick seems to have been known in ancient days but it was not until 400 years ago that any great use seems to have been made of it." They charged for the trick. Clipped the page a long time ago from possibly an old volume of Book of Knowledge. Shows the tent, table, mirror and lens. But obviously a modern depiction. The first box camera seems to date from about 1670 and was a black box with a lens at one end and a white glass plate at the other. One looked at the image and sketched from it. Invented apparently by Englishman Robert Boyle. Magnus Malleus, repository of inane and_obscure_trivia. (Now I suppose Dafydd will have to build one...) Subject: [Fwd: Camera] Date: Sat, 20 Dec 97 20:06:19 MST From: rmhowe To: mark_harris_RSVE60 at email, "Mark.S Harris" The book was probably from about 1930... Magnus I used to get old textbooks, magazines, etc. and dissect them for the medieval and craft pictures, still do actually. :) In this case the Pavilions and Tents book is 2 1/2"+ thick. There are separate ones on yurts and nomad tents. I have about 5 real books on tents, yurts, and teepees too. Hard to find. Not SCA publications. Date: Fri, 21 Oct 2005 18:46:32 -0400 From: Elaine Koogler Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] camera obscura To: Cooks within the SCA Stefan li Rous wrote: > Serena mentioned: >> I have been doing research on the Camera Obscura which led me to >> peruse the text "Natural Magick" by Giambattista della Porta. I don't remember further information but, when I visited Edinburgh some years back, there was a building that had a room in it that had historically functioned as a camera obscura. Didn't have the time to get to see it, but the idea of a room-size camera was a little mind-boggling. Then I remembered that, IIRC, the Italian word for room is "camera"...or is it Latin? So it makes sense that these things were an actual room. Kiri Date: Sat, 22 Oct 2005 12:36:22 -0400 From: "Daniel Phelps" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] camera obscura To: "Cooks within the SCA" Regards the subject, if I recall correctly there was an article in the Smithsonian Magazine on the camera obscura within the last 10 years or so. Daniel Edited by Mark S. Harris p-cameras-msg Page 5 of 6