Tin Can
The man behind the camera, nice to hear about those photographers who did work like this. I meant Ozzie Sweet, who also made a few of those large murals for Kodak many years ago at a photo convention in Los Angles.
It was nice reading about this guy and his work. Very inspirational. I saw a couple of the coloramas but not enough of them. Boy I'm getting old.
Flickr Home Page: https://www.flickr.com/photos/alanklein2000/albums
He was a quiet hero to we photographers at Kodak, and in the local photo community. I was in the (relatively) minor leagues of gov't contracting, and never worked at the big corporate studio downtown where Mr. Montanus was the Man.
I met him once, about ten years ago. It was at the annual airshow on the grass strip at Geneseo; I was walking the flight line when this older guy said to me "You're still shooting film?" (I had a Nikon F3.) We introduced ourselves and had a nice short conversation. Very down to earth guy, for all his accomplishments. RIP!
I should also add that the 8x20 Deardorff used for the Coloramas now belongs to the George Eastman Museum. It was on display a few years ago as part of a Colorado exhibit and believe me, it's a monster.
Somehow I doubt that... they couldn't possibly have needed more than two. But the 1950s-80s were the 'glory days' of unlimited budgets, at least in that part of the company.
The 8x20’s were used in the 1950’s for sure. They also used 8x10’s and I saw a photo with a a Deardorff 8x10 used for one. Ken says the records for how many Deardorff 12x20/8x20 cameras were made is sketchy but he did say they made 35 for Eastman. There were 565 Coloramas made in total.
http://www.deardorffcameras.0catch.com/V20/V20html.htm
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That's wild. I think of the endless effort I spent trying to get my department to upgrade any of our gear.... sigh. Things were better downtown!
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