DescriptionIn 1897, Thomas A. Edison designed and built the first Projecting Kinetoscope. Edison’s Kinetoscope was capable of projecting moving film images. Prior to the development of the Projecting Kinetoscope, Edison developed the 1887 Kinetoscope that allowed one person at a time to peep into a self-contained Kinetoscope to view a 35 mm strip of celluloid film 50 feet long (at 15 frames per second, the film ran to 15 seconds). The new Projecting Kinetoscope was based on some of the same technology as the old Kinetoscope, but incorporated a powerful light source, the “lamphouse,” that propelled images onto a screen. The Projecting Kinetoscope's construction incorporated a great deal of the essential mechanism of the modern movie projector.The following catalog contains information and ordering instructions on the 1908 Projecting Kinetoscope manufactured and distributed by the Edison Manufacturing Company in Orange, New Jersey.
NoteSeries two, producers, active after 1900
NoteThis catalog supersedes Catalog No. 320 and all previous catalogs.Edison Manufacturing Company.
Organization NameRutgers, The State University of New Jersey
RightsThis object has been provided to the NJDH after a copyright, permissions, and usage rights evaluation. The object may be copyright protected. You may make use of the NJDH-held copyrighted information under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported license (see http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/). If undeclared, you may need to contact the rights holder for permission for further use. If you can provide further information on the rights or history of this work, or for guidance on attribution or citing this object, please check at http://www.njdigitalhighway.org/contact.php.