The VistaScreen Co Ltd was a stereographic photography outfit launched in the late 1950s by Jack & Jeff Spring.
VistaScreen
The VistaScreen Co Ltd was a stereographic photography outfit launched in the late 1950s by Jack & Jeff Spring, who, at the time, owned a merchanting paper company called Capital Paper Company, and Stanley Long, a former RAF photographer. Long shot the vast majority of the stereo images, mainly using a 1920s Franke & Heidecke Heidoscop stereo camera with a 6×13 cm plate back. The VistaScreen viewers were manufactured in ivory-coloured plastic and were designed to fold flat to be compactly stored.
The viewers were priced at 1/6d (around 7.5p in today’s terms). The 3D experience these viewers gave was astonishing for the time they were invented. In contrast, more discriminating collectors favoured higher quality viewers, such as those produced by Raumbild. Picture cards were supplied in boxed booklets, with each series containing 10 cards. The individual series packets cost 2/6d (around 12.5p today).
The card packets were marketed at souvenir booths at various locations, photographed, and most were also available through mail order. In some instances, two sets would be taken on a given day – one exclusive to the venue and one marketed to the general public through supply lists included with each new collection. The exact number of series released is unknown, though it is known to be more than 300 10-card sets over the 5-year lifespan of the company.
One of the rarest sets was the Irving Theatre in London, where Stanley Long was the in-house photographer.
Although most of the stereoviews produced by the company focused on Great Britain or at least intended for UK viewers, there is evidence that some VistaScreen sets were printed in other languages and sold in non-Anglophone markets.
Later, VistaScreen was also featured in a Weetabix breakfast cereal promotion with red-branded viewers. The promotion lasted for several years and featured six different sets of 25 3D cards: Working Dogs, Thrills, British Cars, British Birds, Animals, and Our Pets. The Weetabix promotion gave away single cards with their breakfast cereal, and the viewers could purchase them by mail order directly from the Weetabix factory. These were the same as the originals but red, with ‘Weetabix’ printed on the back.
Queen guitarist, astrophysicist, and stereography expert Dr Brian May credits Weetabix VistaScreen cards with his lifelong passion for stereography. May is also credited with resurrecting the formerly defunct London Stereoscopic Company.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VistaScreen













