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I just bought this at a vintage toy store near me. It's a tiny box - about 3 x 3 inches. There's a mini movie on a mini projector reel inside. I haven't opened it yet...
100" projector screen. Description of how to build one here: people.iola.dk/arj/2007/01/15/building-a-100-projector-sc...
Our basic projector package. This is what we use at SNAFU Con, folks. Lights up a wall fairly well in even a well-lit room. In the dark it's even better!
This is one of the projectors at the Capitol Theatre in Westbank where I used to work. I'm not sure why but it's one of my favorite pictures I've ever taken and certainly my favorite without a human subject.
Here is a shot of the projector Graphica has provided us with. It has a main body which houses the light and a magnifying lens. There are three elements up front that are supported by two rods. The front two elements are lenses and the third holds a laser-cut glass gobo. Moving these three elements controls the focus and size of the projection. The black knobs on the side are for adjusting a mounting unit and it runs on 110V power. For portable power we have the Alien Bee battery or an inverter that plugs into the cigarette lighter socket in my car.
An old horse at the Colony Theatre reminds us of what film projectors used to look like until very recently
Zeiss Mark IV projector which was in use at the observatory's planetarium from 1964–2002. Griffith Observatory, Los Angeles, CA
A quite old slide projector from my parents house, I had really used it around twenty years ago... now the special light bulb in it is gone and there is no way to find it... The shot was taken last summer, the background is one of our sea airdbed... :-)
Original shot taken with a Kowa E SLR camera, not removable 50mm f1,9, on kodak color plus 200 asa film, some post processing.
This was an old projector that I saw on display in a small shop in Tianzhifang, Taikang Rd, shanghai. I decided to make it look like an old photograph so used some texture layers to "age" it.
An image projector is an optical device that projects an image (or moving images) onto a surface, commonly a projection screen.
Most projectors creates an image by shining a light through a small transparent image, but some newer types of projectors can project the image directly, by using lasers. A virtual retinal display, or retinal projector, is a projector that projects an image directly on the retina instead of using an external projection screen.
The most common type of projector used today is called a video projector. Video projectors are digital replacements for earlier types of projectors such as slide projectors and overhead projectors. These earlier types of projectors were mostly replaced with digital video projectors throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, but old analog projectors are still used some places. The newest types of projectors are handheld projectors that use lasers or LEDs to project images.
Movie theaters use a type of projector called a movie projector.
Another type of projector is the enlarger, a device used to produce photographic prints from negatives.
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Nikon D7000
Tamron 17-50mm f2.8
Nikon sb-910
This is the original and now antique projector at The Magic Lantern cinema in Tywyn. I couldn't do much about the positioning and as I've just bought a Nikon sb-910, thought it was an ideal chance to test out the flash with bounce. They've just received a grant of £30,000 from the Peter Saunders Trust to move from film to digital.
This is my latest project that I am working on. Its a "Revere" 8mm projector. It took aproximatly 2 days of preity sold work to do. (subtracting hours of game playing and lots of food eating.) This is the completion stage of modeling it.
My 50mm f/1.2 projector lens mounted on a helicoid & focused to infinity. Lot's more extension available
Hidden and decaying above an amusement arcade In Batley, West Yorkshire is the former Regent Picture House. Above a suspended ceiling are the remains of the old cinema, built just after the end of the Great War in 1919. Originally it could hold 800+ patrons who would have paid to see the films of the day.
Today, it is derelict; its projectors and spools of film left in the projection room. Although the tiered flooring remains in the circle, many of the seats have long gone. Two rows of original seats are left. The ornate plaster work of the ceiling remains as do wonderful traces of the old cinema.
Plans are in the pipeline to convert the upstairs of the venue, but keeping many of the original features.
cause old school is still cool! My daughter has received a slide-projector from her grandparents for Xmas