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opera glasses

Opera Glasses
19th century (made)
Place of origin

During the 18th century prosperous theatregoers could buy a long, collapsible type of telescope known as an Opera Glass to help them see performances on stage. The earliest type of binocular opera glasses began to appear in the early 19th century, and the optician Johann Friedrich Voigtlander produced a type in Vienna that was essentially two telescopes bridged together, focused independently by individual draw tubes.

Opera glasses were improved in Paris in 1825 with Pierre Lemière's invention of a central focus wheel with two eye tubes that could be adjusted simultaneously. By the mid 19th century opera glasses were an essential accessory for the fashionable theatregoer, and to satisfy the demand manufacturers produced a range of beautifully made and exquisitely decorated models. The type with long handles favoured in France and Austria were known as lorgnettes, and early 19th century satires featured the use of opera glasses to glimpse details of ladies' dress on stage that would not otherwise have been so evident.


Object details

Category
Object type
Titleopera glasses (generic title)
Brief description
Opera glasses with tooled decoration incised on the gilt retractable casing, steel and brass focus knob, triple steel bridge and steel tubes. Richard Vincent Hughes Bequest.
Credit line
Richard Vincent Hughes Bequest
Summary
During the 18th century prosperous theatregoers could buy a long, collapsible type of telescope known as an Opera Glass to help them see performances on stage. The earliest type of binocular opera glasses began to appear in the early 19th century, and the optician Johann Friedrich Voigtlander produced a type in Vienna that was essentially two telescopes bridged together, focused independently by individual draw tubes.

Opera glasses were improved in Paris in 1825 with Pierre Lemière's invention of a central focus wheel with two eye tubes that could be adjusted simultaneously. By the mid 19th century opera glasses were an essential accessory for the fashionable theatregoer, and to satisfy the demand manufacturers produced a range of beautifully made and exquisitely decorated models. The type with long handles favoured in France and Austria were known as lorgnettes, and early 19th century satires featured the use of opera glasses to glimpse details of ladies' dress on stage that would not otherwise have been so evident.
Collection
Accession number
S.320-1981

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Record createdJuly 1, 2009
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