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The Keystone Camera Company was an American manufacturer of consumer photographic equipment that began in 1919 in Boston. [1] Notable products were Movie cameras, 126 and 110 cameras with built-in electronic flash (the "Everflash" series). In the 1930s, the firm built low cost 16mm cameras that are still in use today.
Many Keystone 16mm camera's were used for informal footage shot by infantry during the Korean and early Vietnam conflicts, due to their lower cost and light weight. They were ubiquitous & had advertisements in most leading magazines of the 50's & 60's. I used 2 myself, along with the 8mm projector which was notable for its cast metal Art Deco ...
Projectors also appeared on the market which took advantage of the balance stripe next to the perforations by recording and replaying stereo sound. Projectors appeared in the late 1970s that featured the ability to play films with an optical soundtrack. The image-sound separation for the optical format was 22 frames.
In the US, Bell and Howell introduced an 8 mm projector in 1934, and in 1935, the Filmo Straight Eight camera, using pre-prepared 8 mm wide film. Standard 8 mm equipment was also manufactured by Carl Zeiss , Siemens & Halske Berlin, the Austrian firm Eumig , Fuji (as Fujica ), and Canon , amongst others.
As a subsidiary of Mast Development Company, Keystone produced telebinoculars, eye training products and overhead projectors. In 1972 Gifford Mast closed down the Meadville manufacturing site, although the name of Keystone View Company continues to be used on eye training equipment.
A film splicer (also called a film joiner, usually in Europe) is a device which can be used to physically join lengths of photographic film. It is mostly used in film motion pictures. The units are made in various types depending on the usage: Single-8, Super 8 film, 16mm, 9,5 mm, 35mm and 70mm. Used in film editing to make a cut (transition ...
This type of use was moderately price-insensitive, with the ability to get the images quickly (thus reducing wasted crew time) a very positive selling feature. The system was late to market and had to compete with upcoming Betamax and VHS videocassette-based systems, which in the pre- camcorder era of the late 1970s had the disadvantages of ...
ELMO then continued producing 8mm products, introducing new Super 8 projectors and cameras to meet the then-new format. It was however not until the 1970s that the company would release its most famous products, namely their ST and GS-series of Super 8 projectors, including the GS-800, GS-1200 and ST-1200HD, the three of which often are ...