|
|
|
|
 |
 |
The Thomas International Photo Directory of Antique Cameras
You have found The Thomas International Photo Directory of Antique Cameras
one of the thousands of books about antiques
at Antique Book Store. We hope that by offering you a tremendous selection of the
books about antiques that you want at incredible prices, you will be back the next time you need anything from Antique Book Store.
We greatly appreciate your patronage and look forward to
servicing you again.
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
You Are Here: Books About Antiques > Antique Directories > Item 88 of 93
|
 |
|
 |
 |
| List Price: |
 |
|
 |
| Our Price: |
 |
$15.99
|
 |
| Customer Rating: |
 |
|
Available from Amazon
Price Last Updated : 8-22-2008
|
 |
 |
|
|
|
|
 |
Features
Hardcover
Publisher: Thomas Intl June 1983
ISBN-10: 0961212802
ISBN-13: 978-0961212803
Product Dimensions:
11.5 x 11.5 x 1 inches
Shipping Weight: 4.2 pounds
Reader Reviews
This book is certainly valuable for what it contains, and is just as certainly usefully-illustrated, though not comprehensively so. Clearly, a lot of painstaking work went into its production. But the reader should not take the author's claims too seriously. There are failings in his research which could have been avoided simply by reading any of a number of previously published books (his failure to identify a number of very well-known cameras of "unknown country", for example, could have been avoided by consulting the edition of McKeown's Price Guide current at the time of publication). Perhaps the most naive claim he makes is that his book includes 80 percent of the named cameras produced between 1840 and 1940. In fact, he does a very creditable job of scratching the surface. The book also has many errors: to name just a few, he lists Daydark cameras as a product of Chicago Ferrotype instead of the Daydark Camera Co. of St Louis (of which he makes no mention); he gives Eastman Kodak credit for the Aiken-Gleason Comet camera; he lists the very well-known German-made Reflecta as "country unknown", as he does also with the famous Russian Gomz Sport (Cnopm), which even has the logo of the Gomz factory displayed clearly in his photo of the camera....and so on. That isn't to say that the book doesn't have value. I use it as one of many identification resources, and where the quality of the photos permits, as a comparative construction resource for some earlier cameras. It has a few pictures of cameras rarely seen. But too many interesting cameras are listed without illustrations, and the descriptions are regrettably (though perhaps understandably) limited to a few technical specifications, with little of the kind of historical background which would make the book most useful. For the uninitiated collector the errors are of sufficient number to make credibility a problem. This is a book which cries for a follow-on edition, larger, with more illustrations and many corrections. In conception, it is potentially the ultimate collector's information resource. But it falls far short of the conception in its current state (and would have a long way to go to be in a league with McKeown). Perhaps Misters Thomas and McKeown could get together for a collaboration and really blow us away with the results. However, until the errors are corrected, I would recommend the book only as an optional nice-to-have backup resource rather than a primary must-have for the collector.
Comment | Permalink |
(Report this)
Back To Top
|

The Thomas International Photo Directory of Antique Cameras
by Douglas B. Thomas
Available from Amazon
Price: $15.99
on 8-22-2008
|
 |
 |
|
 |
|
|
 |
|
|