Jack, I did see that but that is not what I am referring to. What I was mentioning is what was called an E Z View Bellows factor and Angle finder kit. It consists of a ruler that works in tandem with a dial type angle finder device.
Here are the instructions for it:
"To figure bellows factor for view cameras, place the angle finder or the chip next to the product to be photographed, line up the arrow on the bellows factor scale with the image of the angle finder chip on the groundglass, and simply read the scale."
Then it refers to a Picture A.
Picture A consists of two boxes of Crayola Crayons standing on edge next to one another. The Chip or Angle finder is placed sitting flat on the box or boxes and then viewed through the ground glass where you then used the Angle Factor ruler.
"(Pic A) The bellows factor is plus 1 1/2 stops. It gives you direct readings in 1/4, 1/2, or full f/stops up to 3 1/2 stops. In the sample photograph (A) the bellows factor was 1 1/2 stops. Therefore your initial exposure was 2 seconds at f/32, the corrected exposure is to use 6 seconds. The accuracy is great, especially for photographers doing critical transparency work."
There is slightly more to the instructions but I think this gives you an idea of the tool. Apparently this tool assists the photographer in obtaining consistent accurate readings when calculating the bellows factor and angle.
I was just wondering if there were any experienced photographers that might have used this tool.
Jason