Alethoscope
An alethoscope (Greek true+view) is an instrument for viewing pictures with a lens to enlarge and show them with natural relations and proportions.[1] The alethoscope was invented by Carlo Ponti in 1860 and patented in 1861.[2] It was used to view photographs that were colored, perforated and mounted on a curved frame. The alethoscope showed day-and-night effects whether viewing it against the light or reflect the light by two side mirrors. It is the larger version of a megalethoscope.[3]
References[]
- ^ "Alethoscope", The Free Dictionary, retrieved 2019-08-23
- ^ Hannavy, John (2007). Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-Century Photography. New York: Routledge
- ^ Magiche visioni prima del cinema : la Collezione Minici Zotti = Magic visions before the advent of the cinema : Minici Zotti Collection. Zotti Minici, Carlo Alberto., Museo di magiche visioni (Padua, Italy). Padova: Il poligrafo. 2001. ISBN 8871152999. OCLC 48824470.
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Categories:
- Precursors of film
- Audiovisual introductions in 1860
- Optics stubs
- Photography stubs