VistaScreen

The VistaScreen Co Ltd was a stereographic photography outfit launched in the late 1950s by Jack Spring & Jeffrey Leigh, who, at the time, owned a paper merchanting company called Capital Paper Company, and Stanley Long, a former RAF photographer.

[1] The VistaScreen viewers were manufactured in ivory-colored plastic and were designed to fold flat in order to be able to be compactly stored.

The exact number of series released is unknown, though it is known to be in excess of 300 10-card sets over the 5-year lifespan of the company.

[5] One of the rarest sets was that of the Irving Theatre in London, where Stanley Long was the in-house photographer.

[6][7] Although most of the stereoviews produces 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.