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National Film and Sound Archive of AustraliaNational Film and Sound Archive
National Film and Sound Archive of Australia
National Film and Sound Archive
National Film and Sound Archive of Australia
National Film and Sound Archive

Combined magic lantern and 35mm movie projector

1900

Combined magic lantern and 35mm movie projector

1900

  • NFSA IDM34HZE2M
  • TypeObjects
  • MediumArtefact
  • FormEquipment, Domestic
  • GenresChildren
  • Year1900

After the invention of the cinematograph in 1892 and the introduction of commercial cinema screenings in 1895, magic lanterns began looking a little old hat. The enterprising folk at Bing Werke in Germany had a solution: a contraption for home use that combined both. Pictured here, it was a magic lantern with a basic cinematograph and could switch between the two.

Bing Werke (translation: Bing Works) made tin toys, including dolls and steam trains, and advanced technological devices. The company was founded in 1863 by German brothers Ignaz and Adolf Bing and was, for a time, the largest toy factory in the world – until its demise in the early 1930s during the Great Depression and political upheaval in Germany.

After the invention of the cinematograph in 1892 and the introduction of commercial cinema screenings in 1895, magic lanterns began looking a little old hat. The enterprising folk at Bing Werke in Germany had a solution: a contraption for home use that combined both. Pictured here, it was a magic lantern with a basic cinematograph and could switch between the two.

Bing Werke (translation: Bing Works) made tin toys, including dolls and steam trains, and advanced technological devices. The company was founded in 1863 by German brothers Ignaz and Adolf Bing and was, for a time, the largest toy factory in the world – until its demise in the early 1930s during the Great Depression and political upheaval in Germany.

Decades
  • Manufactured by
    Bing Werke, Germany
Decades
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