Accession No

3215


Brief Description

Index cabinet of 850 magic lantern slides relating to biology, English, 1897


Origin

England


Maker


Class

optical


Earliest Date

1897


Latest Date

1920


Inscription Date

1897


Material

wood; metal (brass, white metal); glass; paper (card and one other)


Dimensions

length 655mm; height 372mm; breadth 325mm


Special Collection


Provenance

Transferred from Department of Physics, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, England, 1985.


Inscription


Description Notes

Index cabinet of 850 magic lantern slides relating to biology, English, 1897.

Wooden index cabinet (made in lab where used) with fifteen drawers each with white metal handle and brass label holder. Drawers have paper labels, one missing; some very faded indeed.

Drawers contain magic lantern slides of numerous subjects relating to biology. Card labels in drawers divide the slides into sections.

Condition good (some slides cracked or sellotaped); complete

Parcel label with object reads ‘507 / P.O. Box. Made in lab 1897’


References


Events

Description
Magic lanterns are an early type of image projector. They use a powerful light source to project images onto a screen or wall. They were the precursors to modern slide, overhead and motion picture projectors. Although first developed in the 17th century, it was in the late 18th and 19th centuries that the design of the instrument became developed enough to make magic lantern shows a popular form of general entertainment and scientific and artistic education.

The basic elements of a magic lantern are a metal or wooden body, a light source, a condensing lens, a focusing lens, and interchangeable slides that were commonly produced in sets. Early lantern slides were hand painted on glass, but by the late nineteenth century a number of companies were mass producing slide sets utilising photographic transparencies. Hand cranked mechanisms were sometimes also built into the slides to produce elaborate animated effects. Slide sets might show recent events, exotic locations from around the world, or illustrate tales and fables. For scientific lecturers, the magic lantern was an invaluable instrument for illustrating their public talks, enabling the projection of spectacular astronomical images or massive diagrams of plants and animals.
03/04/2014
Created by: Joshua Nall on 03/04/2014


FM:40563

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