Prestwich Camera
File:Herbert G. Ponting and his camera - H.G.P. LCCN2009633374.jpg
CitationClass=web }}</ref> He incorporated some of the footage he shot into his the 1924 documentary The Great White Silence.
Prestwich Camera was a cine camera produced by the Prestwich Manufacturing Company. It was eventually fitted with external magazines capable of holding up Template:Convert of film. Several types of "Prestwich Camera" were manufactured in the late 19th century. One of the earliest designs of this type held Template:Convert of film—more film than any other camera of the age.
According to Carl Louis Gregory,
- An advertisement in Hopwood's "Living Pictures" edition of 1899 offers the "Prestwich" specialties for animated photography -- "nine different models of cameras and projectors in three sizes for l/2-inch, 1 3/8-inch and 2 3/8-inch width of film."
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
- Coe, Brian. The History of Movie Photography; Eastview Editions, 1981
- Gregory, Carl Louis. "The Early History of Wide Films: Being a Peek into the Past that is Both Interesting and Enlightening" published in American Cinematographer (January, 1930)
- Toulmin, Vanessa et al. (eds.), The Lost World of Mitchell and Kenyon: Edwardian Britain on Film, London, British Film Institute (2004).