Falcon Tripod by Schultz MFG Co/Stanrite Wooden Tripod

Marilynne

Administrator
Staff member
Super Mod
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Any one ever heard of these?
dsc_4928.jpg

The Falcon tripod comes from the Schultz MFG Co in Jersey City, NJ. The Stanrite (heavy) only has the name and Made in USA stamped on a couple of the washers. Both are adjustable.

They belonged to my father-in-law who passed away in 2005. Now that I'm in to photography, my sister-in-law gave them to me.

I don't know anything about tripods. What do I need to go with them? My camera does screw on to them.
 
Any one ever heard of these?
dsc_4928.jpg

The Falcon tripod comes from the Schultz MFG Co in Jersey City, NJ. The Stanrite (heavy) only has the name and Made in USA stamped on a couple of the washers. Both are adjustable.

They belonged to my father-in-law who passed away in 2005. Now that I'm in to photography, my sister-in-law gave them to me.

I don't know anything about tripods. What do I need to go with them? My camera does screw on to them.

The wooden one I would have refinished to look like new or better and then find a vintage camera to put on it. Use as a display piece. I don't think I would ever think of using as a tripod for my Nikon
 

Marilynne

Administrator
Staff member
Super Mod
Contributor
The wooden one I would have refinished to look like new or better and then find a vintage camera to put on it. Use as a display piece. I don't think I would ever think of using as a tripod for my Nikon

It's to heavy for me. We plan on restoring it. Chris thought maybe I could use it in the house.
 

Dave_W

The Dude

It's to heavy for me. We plan on restoring it. Chris thought maybe I could use it in the house.

Not that it's a full blown antique but I wouldn't mess with the patina and would leave it just as it is. If you refinish it, it will lose all the great character it has.
 

Pretzel

Senior Member
Not that it's a full blown antique but I wouldn't mess with the patina and would leave it just as it is. If you refinish it, it will lose all the great character it has.

+1 on that thought, maybe a clear sealant, or better yet a nice non-staining wax, to add a bit of the glow to it, but the character is what makes it.

Of course, a complete refurb is good in it's own rights, but just not what it takes to tell the story of the piece, IMO.
 
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