Conceptually similarAlbum ArchivoAfricans Frightened by Magic Lantern, 1879SS21378213Rights ManagedSPLLight Raypaths through Lenses and PrismsSS2751987SU4513Rights ManagedSCIENCE SOURCESolar Microscope, 18th CenturySS2771206JF3565Rights ManagedSCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARYCinema icons, illustrationSS21402946Royalty FreeDORLING KINDERSLYMagic Lantern, 1895SS2657389FE6201Rights ManagedSCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARYDiorama, illustrationSS22537605Rights ManagedSCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARYClassroom optical benchSS21337806Rights ManagedSCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARYClassroom optical benchSS21337805Rights ManagedSCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARYClassroom optical benchSS21337808Rights ManagedView AllView more with similar tones Magic Lantern ProjectorLicense type:Rights ManagedUnique identifier:SS2778486Legacy Identifier:SW3148Description:The magic lantern used a concave mirror in back of a light source to direct as much of the light as possible through a small rectangular sheet of glass--a "lantern slide"--on which was the painted or photographic image to be projected, and onward into a lens at the front of the apparatus. The lens was adjusted to optimally focus the plane of the slide at the distance of the projection screen, which could be simply a white wall, and it therefore formed an enlarged image of the slide on the screen. The magic lantern was the ancestor of the modern slide projector. It was invented in China in the second century, and was in existence in Europe by the late 17th century. .Credit:David Parker / Science SourceSize:5039px × 6927px (~99 MB)Restrictions:No Sale through SubagentsGet PricingHow Will The Visual Be Used?ShareKeywords:brass-brass lens-C021/9455-C0219455-china-cinema-concave-convex-film-focus-glass-image-lamp-lantern slide-lens-light-magic lantern-mirror-photographic-photography-projection-projestion screen-woodModel release:N/AParent folder:SPL FTP 1409-1410