- 2005.005.8.049
- Item
- [1880-1900]
Item consists of 4 Magic Lantern Slides, each depicting a story in 4 images. Designed by German illustrator Theodor von Kramer
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Item consists of 4 Magic Lantern Slides, each depicting a story in 4 images. Designed by German illustrator Theodor von Kramer
Item consists of 4 Magic Lantern Slides, each depicting a story in 4 images. Designed by German illustrator Theodor von Kramer
This glass lantern slide is representative of personas from Imperial Militaria Germany (1871-1918). It has four portraits of men, they have been identified as Pope Leo XIII (1878-1903), Frederick III (Emperor in 1888 for 99 days, successor to William I and predecessor of William II), Helmuth von Meltke the Elder (Chief of Staff of the Prussian Army from 1822-1888) and Otto von Bismarck (Chancellor from 1871-1890). In the portrait of Frederick III, he is wearing the Order of the Black Eagle, which means he was Emperor in this picture. Since Frederick III only ruled in 1888, and the other three were either still in power or just retiring, we have tentatively dated the piece for after 1888. This year refers to the Year of Three Emperors, because it was the year that William I died, the year Frederick III ruled and died, and that William II took over as Emperor. The images are in colour, potentially colour halftone process on a glass slide. Just one pane of glass, printed on verso.
Magic lantern used to project this type of circular slide was of German design, and was available c.1850. Magic lantern slides were popular in the 1890s. This design was for domestic use, and the slide was illuminated by an oil lamp,and projected a circular image. The slides, often hand coloured, were often mounted six to a small disk. This one in particular has eight hand coloured images. It tells the story of Dick Whittington, and English folktale, the title is written on the slide in three languages, English, French and German (Gesetzlich Geschutzt). It is the story of a young man who makes his fortune in London, with his cat.
Magic lantern used to project this type of circular slide was of German design, and was available c.1850. Magic lantern slides were popular in the 1890s. This design was for domestic use, and the slide was illuminated by an oil lamp,and projected a circular image. The slides, often hand coloured, were often mounted six to a small disk. This one in particular has eight hand coloured images. It tells the story of the pied piper or the rat-catcher of Hameln, a town in Germany, who comes into a small village and leads the rats away, only to return when he receives no payment, to lead the children away. The title is written on the slide in three languages, English, French (Le preneur de rats de Hameln) and German (Der rattenfanger v. Hameln)
Set of 5 Lantern Slides used for teaching purposes. Manufactured for the Ontario Government Picture Bureau.
Item consists of 2 hand painted, medium format lantern slide with 8 individual images. Illustrations resemble Punch and Judy cartoons.
Magic lantern slide, winter scene
Item is a hand painted, medium format lantern slide with 4 tableaus in one illustration depicting winter scenes in a village. Produced by Ernst Plank, Germany.
Item consists of 2 hand painted Magic Lantern Slides, each depicting a story in 4 circular images. Slides show frogs, cats and dogs swimming, driving cars and riding bicycles. Produced by Gebruder Bing, Nuremberg.
Magic lantern slide, boy and a butterfly net
Item is a hand painted, medium format lantern slide with 4 images illustrating a boy swatting a man with a net.
Item is a hand painted, medium format lantern slide with 8 individual images
Item is a magic lantern slide done in the Decalcomania or Chromolitho style. Image shows rowboats, powered by 2-3 men, and a couple of bigger ships, as well as a dock.
Plank, Ernst
Lantern Slides, Canada as a whole
Items are printed slides depicting different places in Canada, as well as some of the country as a whole.
Lantern Slides, Scenes of Canada
Items are printed slides depicting Canadian scenery and towns, modes of transportation and citizens
Item is an automatic coloured magic lantern slide containing several hand painted glass slides that could be rotated against each other with a small attached hand crank. Hand crank appears to be made of wood, as does the mount.
Item are No. 6 Eastman Lantern Slide Mats and dimensions in inches are printed on the outside of the brown envelope
Kodak Canada Inc.
Magic Lantern Slide in Wooden Frame, Fish
Item is a magic lantern slide with a depiction of a very large fish on it. There is a bridge nearby and a building. The style is decalomania. Item comes in a wooden frame with a sticker on it. Sticker has two leaves on it.
Wooden Frame for Magic Lantern Slide
Item is a wooden frame with a sticker on it. Sticker has two leaves on it and a logo in the middle with the initials "E.P." Sticker also has writing on it"(first words illegible) . . . und Zigenbock."
Items depict scenes from along the Canadian Pacific Railway, people, locations, animal, the sun, tombs, ships, indigenous Peoples, cities and trails. Wooden box has the word Songs
on it.
Medical magic lantern slides depicting skin conditions
Item consists of 14 glass magic lantern slides depicting various skin conditions, along with 2 slides of poison ivy plants. Conditions pictured include chicken pox, hives, athlete's foot, acne of the face, impetigo, poison ivy, ringworm, boils, pediculosis, scabies, measles, and animal ringworm. The slides are accompanied by a short, typewritten sheet with a script entitled "Description of Slides" and dated July 15th, 1944, which describes poison ivy and athlete's foot. The slides appear to be written for prospective campers, and intended to be presented by a Miss Hankinson and Mrs Benham. the series was published by the Ryerson Film Service department of Ryerson Press.
This collection consists of early optical devices commonly known as magic lanterns. The first report of the construction of a magic lantern is generally considered to be referring to the Dutch scientist Christiaan Huygens in 1659. The lanterns in this collection are dated from the early 1800s until the mid 1900s and include large professional devices as well as consumer models and toy magic lanterns.
The collection also holds over 500 lantern slides on a wide range of subjects. The slides demonstrate different iterations of glass slide projection and the evolution from hand-painted imagery to photographic and mechanical slides.
For more information about the history of magic lantern projection, please see our blog post: https://library.ryerson.ca/asc/2017/10/new-exhibition-projecting-magic/
Item is a child's, oil lamp magic lantern set manufactured by German company Ernst Planck. The set contains a tin projector, two-part lens, oil lamp, and 12 lantern slides. Instructions for use are printed in German, French, and English on the underside of the box lid, and are as follows:
"Directions for using. Place the Lantern on a table, the lenses facing a smooth white sheet at a distance of about 3-5 feet. See that the wich of the lamp is cut even, then light the lamp which you have filled with petroleum. Let the flame be as large as it is possible without smooting. Put the lamp into the lantern in a way that the screw of the wick is on one side. Now place the slide upside down in the lantern, adjusting the focusing tube by moving it either in or out until the picture is distinctly seen on the white sheet. If the table is at a farther distance, the pictures will be much larger, but not as distinct. The nearer the lantern is standing to the sheet, the more distinct but smaller the pictures will be. The room must be perfectly dark. "