Tuesday, September 18, 2018

View-Master Master Artist: Florence Thomas

Florence Thomas



Florence Thomas



Florence Thomas



Florence Thomas



Florence Thomas



Florence Thomas



By BK Munn

Most fans of the tiny fantasy worlds glimpsed through the lens of a View-Master viewer are probably unaware of the name Florence Thomas. Thomas was the Portland, Oregon sculptor employed by the makers of the 3-D viewer to create miniature dioramas of fairy tales and pop culture scenes which she then photographed for reproduction into the iconic circular white reels that have delighted children and adult collectors for decades.

Thomas produced her first reels for View-Master in 1946 -- a series of Fairy Tales and Mother Goose rhymes that are still in circulation. 

According to one source, Thomas "developed special methods of close-up stereo photography and modeling which is now in common use by major motion picture studios" (John Waldsmith, Stereo Views, 1991). 

She created scenes of such detail and attractiveness that you feel you could step inside and look around a corner at a complete world. 

Besides the Fairy Tales, these worlds included versions of the Frankenstein and Dracula stories, scenes from the comic strip Peanuts, and 3-D versions of animated cartoons like The Flintstones. 

Amazingly, all of the puppet-like figures were sculpted from clay and the scenes were shot using a single-lens camera (not a stereo camera) that was moved on a track to get the stereo shot. 

Sometimes the models were moved slightly between shots to enhance the 3-D effect. 

During her heyday, Thomas appeared on television and radio to satisfy the curiosity of the children who consumed View-Masters by the millions in the 1950s and 1960s. Today, she is largely forgotten except by a few collectors.



Florence Thomas



Florence Thomas



Florence Thomas



Florence Thomas









2 comments:

  1. A great and unique artist who happened to be working in miniature. The quality of her work and the scope ofher artistic vision has never been equalled.

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  2. Just amazing, I think a movie should be made about her artistry.

    ReplyDelete