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Movie Projector Texture old Bell and Howell projector with a hammered metal finish creates odd patterns, found in North Carolina.
Continuing with the theme of outdated vintage entertainment gadgets, I present the vintage movie projector.
This one was a fast build and I managed to build this and one other MOC done while talking on the phone with a friend.
This is based off an actual photo I found and the hardest part was figuring out how to get the reels on the body without bulking the body up to much. Thankfully 2 little lift arms and 2 taps came to my rescue!
I found this old beauty in a hostel in the historical centre of Mexico City. Not sure how it works but the engineering is superb. Found this advert...
1954 Kodak Kodascope Pageant Sound Projector
Here are movies at their finest! Show your personal 16mm silent movies with the Pageant – and they come to life with a new brilliance (and you can even add voice commentary or musical background if you wish). And then switch over to a Hollywood sound feature – or to a sports, travel or educational film (rental libraries have thousands to chose from). Your home movie shows will become the talk of the town!
Simple…certain…in operation. It’s the only 16mm. sound projector lubricated for life. This fact alone has made it the favorite for schools, churches, businesses (no danger of faulty oiling tying it up for costly repairs).
Complete with speaker in a single case, the Pageant is only $375. Be sure to see it…hear it…run it - at your Kodak dealers.
A projector lens I bought recently. It's a big chunk of glass and covers 5x4 with plenty of room to spare. The rear element is too large to fit inside a Speed Graphic which is a shame but with a Sinar shutter it works well.
First test shot: www.flickr.com/photos/bossnas/10875049055/
Shot in the abandoned School of Moss in Croatia. Once a communist school, nature is now taking over again.
More images at
The opening is this weekend--
if you're in or around Ohio, go see!
Dark Crystals
Sarah Coleman, Eli Stertz, Brandi Strickland, Brook Caballero and Petersen Thomas
February 6–28, 2009
Opening Reception and Gallery Hop:
Saturday, February 7th, 6–10pm
www.mahangallery.com | ph: 614.294.3278 | 717 n. high street, columbus, oh 43215
A modern age digital projector, whit a 3d filter and sound rack, based over barco projectors but scaled to minifig size
Get this model and many others on the following link:
Projector lenses are quite fun to use, but with no focusing part, they are a bit difficult to handle.
My lens (a Liesegang Sankar 85mm f/2.5) has a nice long flange distance, which gives me some room betweeen the lens body and the camera mount to place an M42-E adapter, the lens is niclely fitted in a M42-flat ring (then screwed on the adapter). That M42-E adapter includes a focusing helicoid wich makes focusing then possible ! I can still add extension tubes if the minimal flange distance is still too short (I actually have one here).
It goes without saying that using a mirrorless camera makes everything a lot simpler because you have a short flange distance to begin with, much shorter than most of the 35mm film projector lenses (except if their body extends far behind the actual rear element...).
Picture taken with my Sony A68 / Carl Zeiss Jena Pancolar 50mm f/1.8