Monday, October 23, 2017

Tru-Vue Film Cards

In the 1940s, Tru-Vue of Rock Island, Illinois was a direct competitor of the well-known View-Master stereoscopic slide viewers made by Sawyer. In 1951, Sawyer purchased the Tru-Vue company, along with their exclusive licensing contract with Disney, and moved the base of operations to Beaverton, Oregon.

Both Tru-Vue and View-Master would release numerous Disney character film cards, including Snow White. Each film strip would be placed into the viewer and pointed towards a light source to see the 3D images. Tru-Vue cards worked very much like View-Master except they were rectangular in shape rather than round. Seven scenes per Tru-Vue card.

The Snow White card is marked "Copyright 1954 Walt Disney Productions". Card no. D-5.



Card envelopes. (The Pluto card is dated from 1953.)




Another envelope design.



A three-card set: Pinocchio, Peter Pan, Snow White (all dated 1954).




Snow White card sealed in original plastic on hang card. Retail 35¢.



Sawyers Tru-Vue Magic Eyes three-card set. Disney's Snow White is pictured in upper right corner of packaging, yet the illustrations on the cards are of generic characters.




An example of of a Tru-Vue viewer. It is made of Bakelite.

Creative Commons copyright Joe Haupt.


Opaque illustrated cards. There was at least one unlicensed copycat manufacturer in the 1950s--True-View in Hong Kong--that made opaque cards rather than transparent slides.



The Tru-Vue brand would continue through the 1960s, yet it would be View-Master that would go on to great commercial success.

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