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Cottingley Fairies cameras first to undergo state-of-the-art scanning

The five photographs taken by two young cousins in West Yorkshire caused a sensation more than 100 years ago.

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Cameras used to create images of the famous Cottingley Fairies are among the first objects to be internally analysed by state-of-the-art scanning technology.

The cameras were used by young cousins Elsie Wright and Frances Griffiths between 1917 and 1920 to take five images which shocked and intrigued the world for decades.

The pictures of the girls with the fairies at the bottom of their aunt’s garden in Cottingley and the nearby Cottingley Beck, in West Yorkshire, caused a sensation.

An image showing a girl with fairies
The images taken by the two young cousins caused a sensation (University of Bradford/PA)

The cameras are part of the permanent collection of the National Science and Media Museum, in Bradford, and have now been put through the latest CT scanners recently acquired by the University of Bradford’s School of Archaeological and Forensic Sciences.

The two scanners – a MetroTom 1500 micro CT and a NewTom CBCT (Cone Beam CT) – are able to image detail down to a resolution of seven microns – about the width of a strand of spider silk.

One of the cameras is a Quarter-plate “Midg” camera manufactured by W Butcher & Sons, in London, which was used by the cousins, who were 16 and nine at the time, to make the first two Cottingley Fairies photographs in 1917.

A second camera, a Quarter-plate “Cameo” was given to the girls by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and used to create fairy pictures between 1918 and 1920.

Professor Andrew Wilson, of the University of Bradford, said: “Of course, we didn’t find any fairies but I think we did find a little bit of magic – in that these scanners show how we can now look inside objects without disturbing them and see a level of detail that is unsurpassed.”

A woman positioning a camera on a scanner
Eleanor Durrant, conservator, National Science and Media Museum, positioning the ‘Cameo’ camera on the NewTom CBCT (Cone Beam CT) scanner (University of Bradford/PA)

“It’s highly significant because of its back story and it also demonstrates how we’re able to use the latest imaging technology to look inside everyday objects, to see things that would otherwise be hidden. These new scans allow us to see the hidden workings of the cameras and the magic that sits behind them.”

Ruth Quinn, curator of photography and photographic processes at the National Science and Media Museum, said: “The Cottingley Fairies cameras show how ordinary people can achieve extraordinary things when coupled with skill and playful creativity.

“Through scanning these objects, we can show the inner workings of how analogue photography works – and the materials which go into making a camera.

“It’s really exciting to be able to see new details inside our objects using the cutting-edge facilities next door to us at the University of Bradford.”

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