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The lovely Fox Theater, Detroit, Mich
Designed for 20th Century Fox in 1928 by renowned theater architect C. Howard Crane in Oriental style.
Restored in 1988, now features the best shows of Detroit.
Kinemacolor projector no. 19, with original colour filter, from Wirral Museum, used for a demonstration of Kinemacolor films at the BFI's J. Paul Getty Conservation Centre, Berkhamsted, 25 February 2008.
See bioscopic.wordpress.com/2008/02/25/colourful-stories-no-7...
My cousin's husband has quite the antique camera/projector collection. I photographed them for him while visiting. He may decide to sell them before they move next year. I'll be posting more over the next days/wks....this is just the beginning!
A shot of the empty guts of the projector. The black rear section (top section in this photo) is the bulb's hotbox. The glass is IR glass. It looks clear to the human eye, but appears very red in these photos because of the way digital cameras use IR.
Home Theatre Projectors
Home Theatre 1080p Projector
Full HD Home Theatre Projector with 30,000:1 Contrast Ratio and High Brightness for Multiple Applications
Full HD panel (1920 x 1080 pixels)
30,000:1 high contrast ratio (in High Contrast Mode)
1,600 ANSI lumens brightness (in High Brightness Mode)
Full digital projection with DLP system and dual HDMI terminal
Safe and relief design with slide lens cover
Kensington security standard connector and security bar for antitheft
Easy setting with auto keystone correction (vertical) and image shift function
Horizontal and vertical keystone correction, sphere projection and rotation with manual settings
Six advanced picture modes: Standard, Game, Natural, Dynamic, Movie1, Movie2
HDMI CEC function (one touch play, system standby)
Low fan noise 25dB (in Eco + Quite Mode)
Superb dust resistance achieved with DLP sealed optics system
No filter maintenance required