Viewmaster
If you took any pride at all in your toy
box - and we hope
you did - it surely contained a View-Master.
When the action
figure war-simulation wound down and you needed a short
intermission before you began construction on a fort made out of
couch cushions and every single pillow your house had to offer,
the View-Master was where you went for some quiet, rejuvenating
"me-time."
In 1938, William
Gruber conceived of an apparatus that would take colour photos,
the transparencies of which he could lay over one another to
create a 3-D image, which could then be peered at through a
hand-held device with two eyepieces.
Of course, anything that demands a sentence like that is going
to cost a pretty penny to get off the ground, and this is where
Mother Nature lent a hand.
When Gruber was visiting the Oregon Caves National Monument
with his wife, he met a fellow tourist named Harold Graves, who
was the president of a company called Sawyer's Photographic
Services.
The two camera buffs had a lot in common and talked long into
the night, and the next year, they joined forces to manufacture
the first View-Master.
It hit the shelves in Portland, Oregon, and
was marketed towards nature buffs - the first reels were sights
like Colorado's Pikes Peak and Virginia's Luray Caverns.
The
nature buffs apparently had lots of pennies in their backpacks,
because sales were brisk.
By the early 1940's, the World War II years, it wasn't just the
tree-huggers who went in for the View-Masters - it was the
tank-huggers too. The US Military purchased 100,000 viewers and
over six million reels for training purposes.
In 1951, Sawyer purchased the Tru-Vu Stereo Film Company, and
with it, the rights to their Stereochrome viewers and their
license to use Disney characters. Not that points of geographic
interest aren't perfectly nice to look at, but now View-Masters
offered glimpses at subjects that were substantially more fun.
The General Aniline and Film Corporation (GAF for short) bought
Sawyer in 1966. GAF had manufactured slide and Super 8 movie
projectors, and with them at the helm, reel sets from popular 60s
and 70's TV shows and movies were made available.
If you wanted a heavier dose of your favourite screen
personalities, plop that Brady Bunch or Planet Of The
Apes reel in, line the arrow up, hit the spring-loaded lever,
listen for that great plasticky click, and give 'em a whirl.
For the science buffs, there were still reels that harkened
back to the early, more literal-minded View-Master days and
chronicled things like the moon landing.
It's a low-tech toy: no batteries required or electricity
needed, and the only loose parts are the disc reels.
Some of these
came with a story booklet which a viewer could flip through while
he viewed, but a few reels had little self-contained narratives of
their own - text would appear in the middle of the viewer.
GAF also introduced a short-lived "talking" version,
in which an audio track played as the viewer clicked through the
photos, as well as models that could project their pictures up
onto a wall.
Sales ebbed in the 70's with the advent of things
circuitry-related, but the View-Master hasn't called it quits yet.
It's owned by Fisher-Price these days, and is geared toward young
children.
Britney Spears has replaced the likes of Spider-Man, but hey, a
for-your-eyes-only 3-D slide show is always great - whether its
star is animated or not.
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