Woodbury Improved Sciopticon Or. 27.426 - manual
http://hdl.handle.net/1887.1/item:2551522
Woodbury Improved Sciopticon Or. 27.426
Lorenzo J. Marcy and Walter B. Woodbury.
Marcy, Lorenzo J. Woodbury, Walter B. (Walter Bentley) (1834-1885)
Or. 27.426
Projectors (image projectors) Magic lanterns
The Woodbury Improved Sciopticon, which was invented by Lorenzo J. Marcy in Philadelphia around 1872 and sold in Britain from 1873 by Walter B. Woodbury. The base of the projector is wood and supports the metal casing for the glass lens. The circular lens at the front is encased in brass and the section to hold slides is also brass. The back section which originally housed a kerosene lamp is made from painted tinplate. (information from: https://ehive.com/collections/3977/objects/892608/magic-lantern-projecto...) Maker's plate at front "THE WOODBURY/ IMPROVED/ SCIOPTICON/ REGISTERED TRADE MARK THE SCIOPTICON". The 6 books and documents mentioned in this record are part of signature Or. 27.426 and are placed in the box with the magic lantern. Also document with information of the auctions of the sciopticon and het lantern slides (Or. 27.426 and Or. 27.425) at Bonhams, 4 October 1911.
The Sciopticon Manual. Containing full directions for using this new drawing room lantern. 3rd edition. Woodbury, Lecture on Java. To acoompany 48 photographs taken by him during his residence in the Island. [copied from an original in the Barnes Collection, part of the Magic Lantern Society Slide Readings Library]. Alan F. Elliott, The Woodbury Papers. Letters and Documents held by The Royal Photographic Society. Second Printing with Corrections 1997. Walter Woodbury. A Victorian Study, Melbourne 2008. Lantern slides. How to make and color them. 6th edition, Rochester 1921. Walter B. Woodbury, Science at home. A series of experiments in chemistry, optics, electricity, magnetism, etc. adapted for the magic lantern. [reprinted from the English Mechanic].
Part of collection:
Geoffrey Allan Edwards
No linguistic content
No place, unknown, or undetermined
1 projector : magic lantern ; 43.5 x 36 x 14 cm (magic lantern), 40 x 31 x 17.8 cm (wooden box)
4 scans (magic lantern) and 15 scans (manual with 56 pages)
1875-1885
http://hdl.handle.net/1887.1/item:2304520
Leiden University Libraries,