Jump to 0 top | 1 navigation | 2 content | 3 extra information (sidebar) | 4 footer | 5 toolbar


Content

Movie camera

I had find many products about Faux leather universal GPS case(plastic case). Faux leather universal GPS case(plastic case) Faux leather universal GPS case(plastic case) Place of Origin: China Guangdong Brand Name: Kroo Model Number: AGPSKOO2 Company Info Terms of Payment: L/C,T/T Supply Ability: 1500 Piece/Pieces per Day Minimum Order: 500 Piece/Pieces Delivery Lead Time: 15Day 1) Attactive and functional design; 2) Material: black faux leather with black velvet interior linings; 3) Top zipper opening; 4) Protects your GPS from dust and damage and scratch; 5) Back compartment for car charger cable and cards; 6) Leahter side handle with swivel hook Send a message directly to this member Place of Origin: China Guangdong Brand Name: Kroo Model Number: AGPSKOO2 Terms of Payme

And you can see more from laptop neoprene cases chain saw case desktop atx case calculator cases neoprene computer case clear dvd cases micro pc cases slim computer case tie cases

The Arricam ST, a popular 35 mm film camera currently used on major productions.
The movie camera is a type of photographic camera which takes a rapid sequence of photographs on strips of film. In contrast to a still camera, which captures a single snapshot at a time, the movie camera takes a series of images, each called a "frame". This is accomplished through an intermittent mechanism. The frames are later played back in a movie projector at a specific speed, called the "frame rate" (number of frames per second). While viewing, a person's eyes and brain merge the separate pictures together to create the illusion of motion.
Contents
1 History
2 Technical details
3 Multiple cameras
4 Sound synchronization
5 Home movie cameras
6 References
7 See also
//
History
One of the first motion-picture film cameras, if not the first at all, was designed by Louis Le Prince in 1888. It still exists with the National Media Museum, England. Le Prince employed paper bands and cellulo?d film from John Carbutt and or Blair & Eastman in 1? inch width.
Another pioneer is William Green of Bristol, England. In 1888-89 he had an A. L built a perforating apparatus in order to prepare paper film for his camera.
Georges Demen?, employee with Etienne Jules Marey, constructed the Beater Movement in 1893. The film width is 60 mm.
Max Skladanowsky conceived his own make of camera in 1894-95, but more interesting is his ioscop projector, the first duplex construction in practice. Green, part designer for Prestwich, also designed a duplex projecting machine. This 1896 wide-film projector can be seen at the South Kensington Science Museum.
The Lumie Domitor camera was originated by Charles Moisson, chief mechanic of the Lumie works at Lyon in 1894. They shot on paper film of 35 millimeter width. In 1895 the Lumie could buy cellulo?d film from New-York Celluloid Manufacturing Co. This they covered with their own Etiquette-bleue emulsion, had it cut into strips and perforated. It is not known which recipe they used for positives.
Then an ever increasing number of cine cameras came up. The makes and brands would be: Birt Acres (1894-95), the Latham Eidoloscope by Lauste (1895), the Marvin & Casler Bioscope by Dickson (1895), Path fres (1896) with ratchet claws, Prestwich (1896), Newman & Guardia (1896), de Bedts, Gaumont-Dy (1896), Schneider, Schimpf, Akeley, Debrie, Bell & Howell, Leonard-Mitchell, Ertel, Ernemann, Eclair, Stachow, Universal, Institute, Wall, Lytax, and many others.
The first all-metal cine camera is the Bell & Howell Standard of 1911-12. One of the most complicated models is the Mitchell-Technicolor Beam Splitting Three-Strip Camera of 1932. With it, three colour separation originals are obtained behind a purple, a green, and a red light filter, the latter being part of one of the three different raw materials in use. Blue and red light passes a purple filter . . .
The most popular 35 mm cameras in use today are Arriflex, Moviecam (now owned by the Arri Group), and Panavision models. For very high speed filming, PhotoSonics are used.
Technical details

Basic operation: When the shutter inside the camera is open, the film is illuminated. When the shutter is completely covering the film gate, the film strip is being moved one frame further by one or two claws which advance the film by engaging and pulling it through the perforations.
Most of the optical and mechanical elements of a movie camera are present in the movie projector. The requirements for film tensioning, take-up, intermittent motion, loops, and rack positioning are almost identical. The camera will not have an illumination source and will maintain its film stock in a light-tight enclosure. A camera will also have exposure control via an iris aperture located on the lens. Also, there is a rotating, sometimes mirrored shutter behind the lens, which alternately passes the light from the lens to the film, or reflects it into the viewfinder. The righthand side of the camera is often referred to by camera assistants as "the dumb side" because it usually lacks indicators or readouts and access to the film threading, as well as lens markings on many lens models. More recent equipment often has done much to minimize these shortcomings, although access to the film movement block by both sides is precluded by basic motor and electronic design necessities.

A spring-wound Bolex 16 mm camera
The standardized frame rate for commercial sound film is 24 frames per second. The standard commercial (i.e., movie-theater film) width is 35 millimeters, while many other film formats exist. The standard aspect ratios are 1.66, 1.85, and 2.39 (anamorphic). NTSC video (common in North America and Japan) plays at 29.97 frame/s; PAL (common in most other countries) plays at 25 frame/s....(and so on)

You can also see some feature products :

standard jewel cases aluminum pistol case embroidery pillow cases electronics supplier flex atx case leather watch case mens watch case professional makeup cases 60 cd case power tool case blank cd case neoprene computer cases waterproof luggage bulk jewel cases international traveller luggage portable jewelry cases leather cigarette cases wedding dress cover cigar leather case hard side case die casting manufacturer

  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • 0 ratings

Chip pan (machine shop)

I had find many products about Cotton Textile Material. Cotton Textile Material For export of cottonWe are introducing our self as one of the leading ginners in our territory (saurashtra) gujarat. We are interest to export for long & short staple cotton.We are having upgraded "tmc" approved ginning & pressing unit and triding co. Located in prime cotton growing area (saurashtra) gujarat (india) with all cotton testing laboratory equipments which is help us to maintain our quality and supply least contaminated cotton as per international quality standard.To avoid contaminatation and maintain cotton quality. * we buy hand picked kapas dirctly from the farmer. * our selector is going to the farmer to pass the unginned cotton. (kapas) * only cloth brooms are used for cleaning. * we are loading kapas in truck with the cotton cloth. * kapas is cleared by visual graders, tested by electronic machine. * workers tie their hair with cotton cloth to avoid hair strands. * moisture control in every stage. * human handling is minimized in every stage of ginning. * k

And you can see more from used surplus machinery food rounding machine foil production machine straightenging cutting machine automatic heat machine laser maring machine granule pack machine pet extrusion machine migmag welding machine

It does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve it by citing reliable sources. Tagged since March 2009.
It needs to be expanded. Tagged since March 2009.
It may require general cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Tagged since March 2009.
Chip pans are flat metal pans used to catch metal chips (swarf) resulting from cutting metal in a lathe, milling machine, or other machine tool. A chip pan can be integral to the supporting base of the machine, or can be removable.
Categories: Tools
Hidden categories: Articles lacking sources from March 2009 | All articles lacking sources | Articles to be expanded since March 2009 | All articles to be expanded | Cleanup from March 2009 | All pages needing cleanup(and so on)

You can also see some feature products :

paper pocket machine super span machine Hand Impulse Sealer twin screw machine welded pipe machinery wood pallet machinery Injection Molding Machinery compression examination machine hydraulic blockbrick machine cotton swabs machine fruit grading machine invertwr welding machine crushed ice machine paver tile machine clour brick machinery mini rewinding machine wood brushing machine glass making machinery rubberplastic laboratory machine bates numbering machine frame assembly machine

  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • 0 ratings

Go-to-bed matchbox



A brass go-to-bed bear. The hinged head allows access to the matches stored in the body; the lit match is placed in the hole at the end of the staff
Go-to-bed or getting-into-bed matchboxes were a variety of match storage box popular in the mid to late 1800s. Relatively small, about 6cms high, they were frequently made of metal of some kind, though sometimes of wood or ivory.
Most incorporated a rough surface on which the match could be struck. All featured a small hole or finial, sometimes in ivory and always part of the design, into which the lighted match could be placed, rather like a miniature candle. The idea was that, rather than risk taking a lighted candle near to the voluminous fabric of a four poster bed, the lighted match on the mantelpiece would burn for some 30 seconds just long enough for the person to snuff out the candle and get into bed.
There is huge variety in the designs of these little pieces. Some were relatively simple boxes or cylindrical containers, some were barrels in wood or metal, while others were cast metal figures in a wide variety of designs. Private collections include castle towers, a Napoleonic soldier of the Second Empire, a Gothic knight holding a torch, a little boy selling newspapers, a bear chained to a ragged staff, and so on. Other designs feature flower sellers and exotic ladies with a separate 'basket' in which the matches were stored.
One specific variety of go-to-bed worthy of mention is 'Prince Albert's Safety Vesta Box'. This was a decorated brass tub with an embossed top. Ribbed under base for striking matches, it had a small finial to take a single match on top, and was marked 'Prince Albert's Safety Box, 150 Patent Vesta Lights'.
This culture-related article is a stub. You can help by expanding it.
Categories: Home appliances | Firelighting | Collecting | Culture stubs
Hidden categories: Articles lacking sources from July 2007 | All articles lacking sources(and so on) To get More information , you can visit some products about automatic paper towel dispenser , paper storage boxes , premiumphotopaper , office paper shredder , paper bags manufacturer , metallized paper , , paper straw , handmade paper boxes , kraft paper shopping bag , .

  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • 0 ratings

Oyneg Shabbos (group)



One of the milk cans used to hide documents. From the Ringelblum "Oyneg Shabbos" Archive
Oyneg Shabbos (Yiddish pronunciation; in Hebrew: Oneg Shabbat, ???? ???) was the code name of a group led by Jewish historian Dr. Emanuel Ringelblum in the Warsaw Ghetto during the Nazi-German occupation of Warsaw in World War II. The group, which included historians, writers, rabbis and social workers, was dedicated to chronicling life in the Ghetto. They worked as a team, collecting documents and soliciting testimonies and reports from dozens of volunteers of all ages. The materials submitted included essays, diaries, drawings, wall posters, and other materials describing life in the Ghetto. The collection work started in September 1939 and ended in January 1943.
The members of Oyneg Shabbos initially collected the material with the intention that they would write a book after the war about the horrors they had witnessed. As the pace of deportations increased, and it became clear that the destination was the Treblinka death camp and few of Warsaw's Jews were likely to survive, Ringelblum had the archives stored in 3 milk cans and ten metal boxes, which were then buried in three separate locations in the Ghetto. Two of the canisters, containing thousands of documents, were unearthed in 1946 and a further ten boxes in 1950. The third cache has yet to be uncovered, but is rumored to be buried beneath what is now the Chinese Embassy in Warsaw. However, a search attempt in 2005 failed to locate the missing archival material.
On January 19, 1942, an escaped inmate from the Chelmno extermination camp, Jacob Grojanowski, reached the Warsaw Ghetto, where he gave detailed information about the camp to the Oneg Shabbat group. His report, which became known as the "Grojanowski Report", was smuggled out of the ghetto through the channels of the Polish underground, reached London and was published by June..
The name Oneg Shabbat means joy of the Sabbath in Hebrew and usually refers to a celebratory gathering held after Sabbath services, often with food, singing, study, discussion, and socializing. This name was selected because the group tended to meet on Saturdays to discuss the progress of their collection and documentation efforts.
External links
UNESCO: Poland - Warsaw Ghetto Archives (Emanuel Ringelblum Archives)
Museum of Jewish Heritage
Categories: Memory of the World Register | Jewish history | History of Warsaw | Jewish history stubs(and so on) To get More information , you can visit some products about cz tennis bracelet , silver heart toggle necklace , coin pearl bracelet , ruby bracelet , pearl bracelet , cancer bracelet , bracelet antique , wholesale magnetic bracelet , magnetic wrist bracelet , diabetic bracelet , .

  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • No ratings
  • 0 ratings
Pages: 1 (1 - 4 / 4)