Remember those chunky red 3D scene viewers back in the eighties? I had one with scenes of Postman Pat going about his daily mail delivery duties, obviously this was before email made him redundant and ...
Dear John: I have attached photos of a viewer - we cannot remember what it is called - that has been in our family for at least 90 years. Can you tell us the name of the thing and what the value might ...
I'm surprised that we haven't yet seen a stereoscope revival. This is a perfect time for it, what with our culture's obsession with Victorian detritus and with the artisanal, as well as new technical ...
Q We found this device while cleaning out our mother’s home of 60-plus years. I remember seeing it as a child, and being told it was a machine for exercising the eyes. The underside is marked ...
Smitten with our little plastic View-Masters as kids, few of us baby boomers knew that our forebears amused themselves with their own three-dimensional gizmos. Before television, before radio, there ...
'The Haunted Lane,' a stereoscope card from L.M. Melander & Bro., 1875. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division. October has long been associated with ghosts – from ancient Celtic ...
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English inventor Charles John Roswell patented the first graphoscope in 1864. The graphoscope, a device to enhance viewings of photographs and other still images, consists of a round magnifying glass ...
Q: Where, who and how do I find value and buyers for stereoscope cards showing WW I front lines? -- Bob, Tulsa Q: I have two stereoscope slides from the French Revolution. Made in France, they are ...
I'm surprised that we haven't yet seen a stereoscope revival. This is a perfect time for it, what with our culture's obsession with Victorian detritus and with the artisanal, as well as new technical ...