Are stereoscope cards worth anything?

Are stereoscope cards worth anything?

As described, value is $12 to $15 apiece. If pricked, value is $50 to $150 each. As for the subject matter, French cardmakers specialized in diabolical or theatrical subjects.

When were Stereographs invented?

1850s
Stereographs were first made in the 1850s and are still made today. They were most popular between 1870 and 1920. In 1851 stereo daguerreotypes were exhibited for the first time to the general public at the London International Exhibition (Crystal Palace).

What were Stereographs used for?

Stereographs, an early form of three-dimensional photograph, were a major vehicle for popular education and entertainment in the latter part of the nineteenth century.

Are Stereoscopes used today?

The stereoscope, which dates from the 1850s, consisted of two prismatic lenses and a wooden stand to hold the stereo card. This type of stereoscope remained in production for a century and there are still companies making them in limited production currently.

Who used Stereographs?

In the late 1830s and 1840s, scientists such as Niépce, Daguerre and Talbot created the processes that made photography possible and these were soon used to produce stereographs. In 1850 Sir William Brewster invented an inexpensive viewing device for stereographs called the lenticular stereoscope.

Who invented stereoscopes?

Charles WheatstoneStereoscope / Inventor

Why are stereograph cards curved?

Many stereoviews have a slight bend and are known as a “curved” mount. The slight curve in the stereoview card improves the ability to view the three-dimensional quality of the image. Often text, printed on the back of the cards, gave details on the scene geographically and culturally.

How many types of stereoscopes are there?

two basic
There are two basic types of stereoscopes for stereoscopic viewing of photographs, namely, the lens stereoscope and the mirror stereoscope. Each has advantages and disadvantages.

Who invented the Stereograph?

What were Stereoviews?

Stereopticon photographs, commonly known as stereoviews or stereographs, are taken by a camera with two lenses, which takes two separate photos about 2½ inches apart, approximately the distance between our eyes. The photos may appear identical, but they are slightly different.

Who invented the carte de visite?

A.A.E. Disderi
These were small cards, the size of a formal visiting card about 4 1/2 x 2 1/2 inches (11.4 x 6.3 cm), with a black-and-white photograph attached, often of a celebrity. They were invented in 1854 by A.A.E. Disderi and were hugely popular in the 1860s and often collected in Victorian portrait albums.

Why were carte de visite so popular?

The carte de visite photograph proved to be a very popular item during the American Civil War. Soldiers, friends and family members would have a means of inexpensively obtaining photographs and sending them to loved ones in small envelopes.

When was the first stereoview made?

Walker, L.E., Starucca Viaduct, circa 1872. But the earliest American stereoviews were images right on glass, such as this by Langenheim, from the mid 1850s. The Langenheims also made some of the earliest conventional stereoviews (with prints pasted onto cards), but here’s a glass view.

How many stereograph cards are there?

Several dozen stereograph cards to several hundreds of them may have been collected by middle class families in the late 19th Century just as contemporary families may have a large collection of DVDs today.

What are some of the best stereoviews you’ve seen?

Carleton Watkins’ complete (almost) stereoviews–an ambitious and focussed project. Stereoviews of Yellowstone–maybe the best entry into the range of Western stereoviews, including a nice image of a stereoview camera on the masthead. An impressive site in every way.

What size are stereoviews?

U. S. STEREOVIEWS 1860-1880. By far, most stereoviews are thin paper photographs pasted onto a 3 1/2 by 7 inch card. Like this: