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At the same time, Gray also developed a Telojector, a gun-turret style slide projector for 2 in × 2 in (51 mm × 51 mm) slides which had two projectors, facilitating easier lap dissolves between the two. The Telop III was introduced in 1954, was a refinement of the previous makes. Reduced to a single-channel version of the Telop, the Telop III ...
A carousel slide projector. The example pictured is a Kodak Carousel model 4400, dating from the mid-1980s. A carousel slide projector is a slide projector that uses a rotary tray to store slides, used to project slide photographs and to create slideshows. It was first patented on May 11, 1965, by David E. Hansen of Fairport, New York.
One of the primary differentiators between slide projectors was the form factor of the cartridges used to hold and, in many cases, store slides. Some automated slide projectors offered slide trays with straight, rectangular shapes, [12] which were popular in Europe; these use an arm, moving laterally, to extract a slide from the cartridge for ...
The Slide Cube Projector is a slide projector and system, manufactured and marketed by Bell & Howell, which was introduced in 1970 and marketed through the 1980s.The projector derived its name from its transparent cubical plastic slide storage magazine, approximately 5.5 cm (2.2 in) in each dimension (a bit larger than a standard 135 film slide mount), that held 36 to 44 slides, depending on ...
Sawyer's, Inc. was an American manufacturer and retailer of slide projectors, scenic slides, View-Master reels and viewers, postcards, and related products, based in Portland, Oregon. Founded in 1914 as a photo-finishing company, Sawyer's began producing and selling View-Masters in 1939, and that soon became its primary product.
In 1905 Keystone View Company began its Educational Department, selling views and glass lantern slides (the 4 x 3.25 inch ancestors of the better-known 2 x 2 inch slides containing transparencies on film, which eventually replaced them) to schools throughout the country. They also produced lantern slide projection equipment.
A large-format slide projector (also often called large-format projector or large-image projector) is a kind of slide projector for large image projection which has a very powerful light source (up to 12 thousand watts using arc lamps). The light source generates a lot of heat even when filtered to only visible light; the projected transparency ...
Slide Archive with more than 7,000 lantern slides in various formats and types; some from the 18th Century. Contains many toy slides, lecture sets, hand-painted dissolving views and some apparatus. Parts of the collection are accessible in the EYE Collection Database, a little fraction (c. 2,000 images) is accessible online via the Lucerna ...