View allAll Photos Tagged magiclantern
Dates: ca. 1900
Maker: T. H. McAllistar
Place: USA: New York
Donor: Gift of the Estate of Gerard Dallas Jencks
Photographer Credit: Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library
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First attemp to produce a HDR image that covers about all dynamic range.
Shots: Auto HDR function of Magic Lantern 2.3. It takes 8 individual images with 1 EV increments from -2 to +5 EV.
Edit: PS for merging and some adjustments.
The projection is onto the cloister of the ruined St Andrews Cathedral.
Images of the rehearsal of 'Via Maris' at St Andrews Cathedral.
Website : lvalenciaphoto.wordpress.com/
Canon 5d mark 2
Canon 24-105mm
Magic lantern Dualiso
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Merci de ne pas utiliser cette photo sans mon autorisatio
I've recently come into possession of two boxes of glass 'Magic Lantern' slides from the early 1900's. I'm slowly scanning and digitally restoring them.
Any help in identifying the subjects or locations would be appreciated.
‘Professor’ Mervyn Heard traced the history of magic lantern slides, featuring an ingenious selection of original hand-painted 18th and 19th century mechanically-moving images presented on an original Victorian, dissolving-view projector.
Part of Watch Me Move: The Animation Show.
Original sellers sticker is on the side of the box.
J & A Boyes
Ironmongers
Model Steam Toys,Magic Lanterns, Slides for Lant (the rest is missing)
MAGIC LANTERN
No. !#13
241 & 243 Elizabeth St
(the rest is missing) but it coud be MELBOURNE VICTORIA AUSTRALIA
I discovered a new firmware for my camera just before christmas called' magic lantern' and one thing that got me excited was the inbuilt intervalometer. I'd always wanted to try timelapse but I never got around to buying a timer remote. So I finally head out to the back roads of Hayle and look around for a place to set up. I used a nd9 soft grad at 1 shot/30 seconds for 30 minutes. I filled the time watching Big Bang Theory and then a farmer pulled up and we put the world to rights inbetween talking about photography.
Magic Lantern slides from some vaguely Alpine-looking place, most likely in Europe, most likely in the 1930s or thereabout.
Update: one of the other slides in the set was labeled, "Between Fionnay & Mauvoisin 1938" which makes it Switzerland, somewhat unsurprisingly.
Update: Update: Mark Osterman at Eastman House opined that these are likely to be Dufaycolor.