Looking for a little help clarifying what exactly I have here.
This is marked JH Dallmeyer No. 3 Compound Tele-Photo Attachment Patent Dec 1891.
It came attached via a period correct custom flange on a Dallmeyer 2B lens. What’s tripping me up is that I cannot get it to work with the lens at all so I’m wondering if this was an attachment for a different Dallmeyer lens that somehow founds its way to being attached to the 2B that I have. It’s all quite confusing though because the mounting flange looks to all be original Dallmeyer work and is made to fit to the 2B.
Referring to an 1896 Dallmeyer catalog, a few versions of the tele-photo attachments are mentioned with illustrations but none quite match this one. Here is the catalog. The tele-photo attachments are toward the end:
The tele-photo attachments shown there all have larger negative elements much closer in size to the front and rear elements of the 2B and other portrait lenses that they were made for. The one I have has a much smaller negative element (see image below).
When attached to the lens in all configurations I can think of i.e. with and without the rear elements attached (I’ve even tried without the front element as well as reverses the negative element and mounted it inside the cone rather than the outside as pictured) to the portrait lens, it all fits together nicely but does not focus and image on the ground glass at any bellows extension. The further out the bellows is extended, the more out of focus things seem to get. The more I shorten the bellows, it seems to start getting a little more in focus but never anywhere near making an image. There is a limit to how collapses I can make the bellows because at a certain point the rear element of the attachment touches the ground glass.
So I really have no idea what’s going on with this thing. I’ve also been unable to find any photos or documentation matching the design of this particular tele-photo attachment. Any insight would be appreciated.
This is marked JH Dallmeyer No. 3 Compound Tele-Photo Attachment Patent Dec 1891.
It came attached via a period correct custom flange on a Dallmeyer 2B lens. What’s tripping me up is that I cannot get it to work with the lens at all so I’m wondering if this was an attachment for a different Dallmeyer lens that somehow founds its way to being attached to the 2B that I have. It’s all quite confusing though because the mounting flange looks to all be original Dallmeyer work and is made to fit to the 2B.
Referring to an 1896 Dallmeyer catalog, a few versions of the tele-photo attachments are mentioned with illustrations but none quite match this one. Here is the catalog. The tele-photo attachments are toward the end:
The tele-photo attachments shown there all have larger negative elements much closer in size to the front and rear elements of the 2B and other portrait lenses that they were made for. The one I have has a much smaller negative element (see image below).
When attached to the lens in all configurations I can think of i.e. with and without the rear elements attached (I’ve even tried without the front element as well as reverses the negative element and mounted it inside the cone rather than the outside as pictured) to the portrait lens, it all fits together nicely but does not focus and image on the ground glass at any bellows extension. The further out the bellows is extended, the more out of focus things seem to get. The more I shorten the bellows, it seems to start getting a little more in focus but never anywhere near making an image. There is a limit to how collapses I can make the bellows because at a certain point the rear element of the attachment touches the ground glass.
So I really have no idea what’s going on with this thing. I’ve also been unable to find any photos or documentation matching the design of this particular tele-photo attachment. Any insight would be appreciated.