The arrival during a well-publicised visit to Australia and New Zealand in 1902 of the flamboyant American panoramic photographer
Melvin Vaniman (1866–1912) popularised the format in Australia. and of
Auckland,
Sydney and
Brisbane (held by the
State Library of New South Wales) and dated around 1904. By 1907 Vere Scott had achieved a high profile in
South Australia. An article in
The Adelaide Register of 19 December 1907 declared that Vere Scott had “‘recently imported the largest panoramic camera that had yet been brought to the Commonwealth, and that it was designed to take pictures 24 x 9 inches”. That camera may have been the more cumbersome
Kodak Cirkut of 1904; a large format bellows camera that could be converted to make panoramas by mounting it on a clockwork turntable coupled to a spool of film that unrolled past a slit at the film plane, and was capable of 360º views with a resolution breathtaking even by current digital standards. Produced until 1949, it is used by some, even today. Scott was issuing panoramic postcards and in 1908, after a move to Western Australia, was invited to judge the
Boulder Technical School Camera Club competition. He embraced the
Pictorialist photography movement that was particularly advanced in Adelaide in these years due largely to its promotion by Adelaide-born art photographer John Kauffmann (1864–1942). Beyond the traditional topographical factuality of his city views, the influence of this style is evident in Scott's exposure, printing and retouching (usually in skies) for chiaroscuro effects in his views, some being made to look as if taken by moonlight. Around 1907 Vere Scott moved to
Kalgoorlie, Western Australia and the prosperity of its new gold mining operations, where he was active in covering sports and other local events for the
Kalgoorlie Western Argus and covered mining activities for a long article in
The Lone Hand. He was soon travelling again: images of
Wellington and
Christchurch are dated 1910–14, and a
Brisbane River view to 1915. A number of his images appeared in
E.J.Brady's 1918 book
Australia Unlimited. == San Francisco ==