part of the jonathan ross collection
Stereoviews
Unidentified Photographers
Woman with a Witch Mirror by an unidentified photographer.
This section contains genre stereoviews by as yet unidentified photographers of whose work I have found at least two examples.
I look at hundreds of stereos online every week and take pleasure in spotting images which have something in common with works already in the collection. As I have quite a strong visual memory, it could be a model’s face, a wallpaper pattern, a piece of furniture or the design of a label that reunites these photos, over 150 years after they emerged from the same studios.
A comfortable size for freeviewing (parallel viewing) the images in the linked pdf documents is 125% or 150%. This can be adjusted at the top right of the document.
Stereoviews replicate the way we see the world by taking two views of a scene, one from the right eye position and another from the left. When these are mounted together and viewed in a stereoscope, the brain merges them into a 3-dimensional or ‘stereoscopic’ image.
The technique emerged in the 1850s, soon after the invention of photography, through the work of Charles Wheatstone and Sir David Brewster, and developed into a worldwide craze with thousands of practitioners.
Stereo photography has gone out of fashion several times over the past couple of centuries, only to be rediscovered by later generations. Most of the images on this site are by European photographers working in the 1850s and 60s.
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