-
Auricon cameras were 16 mm film
Single System sound-on-film
motion picture cameras manufactured in the 1940s
through the
early 1980s.
Auricon cameras...
- emplo**** at the plant. In 1988 the
majority of the
company was
acquired by
Auricon Beteiligungs AG. In 1991 it was
organized into the
Jenbacher Energy Systems...
-
organizations and do****entarians in the
United States frequently shot on
portable Auricon and, later, CP-16
cameras that were self-blimped and had the
ability to...
-
apartment of Warhol's
business manager, Fred Hughes.
Morrissey used a 16mm
Auricon camera favored by
Warhol for his
earlier films. This
camera permitted the...
-
motor drive CECO
blimp for
camera and
motor drive Auricon synchronous motor drive for 24fps
Auricon sound blimp Electronic shutter release control (~...
-
Cinema Products Corporation of Hollywood, California. A
range of
cameras of
Auricon ancestry. They were
primarily intended for
television news
filming and...
-
camera limited to
three minutes of
shooting time,
Empire was
filmed on an
Auricon camera that
allowed for
takes of
around 33 minutes. In the Rockefeller...
- broadcasting.
Filmo cameras were most
commonly used for
silent filming,
while Auricon cameras were used for
filming with
synchronized sound.
Since editing required...
- 485-minute-long
experimental film,
Empire (1965), on 10
rolls of film
using an
Auricon camera via 16 mm film,
which allowed longer takes than its 35 mm counterpart...
-
corner in Warhol's
Factory while the 16mm
black and
white camera, the
Auricon brand,
stood on a
stand and was
barely moved.
Vinyl was
originally supposed...