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The history of Camera Bellows goes back to 1895, when the company
was founded in Birmingham, England by Harry Glanvill, a man who recognised
the potential of what was then the fledgling photographic industry.
From the outset, the enterprise was a family affair.
Harry ran the company with his wife - Florence - an expert maker of
fire bellows, who turned her skills to the photographic trade. The
business grew steadily, and as time went by new applications for bellows
- in industrial situations for example - were identified and developed.
In 1934, when Harry Glanvill died, Florence continued
to run the business with her son Harry jr. The Glanvill family connection
remains with the company even today.
There have been many significant milestones in the
company's development. In 1936, for instance, Camera Bellows was asked
to design and produce bellows for a new Kodak product, the Brownie
camera. Over 1 million bellows were made in the following two decades.
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