- The
Phantoscope was a film
projection machine, a
creation of
Charles Francis Jenkins and
Thomas Armat. In the
early 1890s,
Jenkins began creating the...
-
Jenkins and
Thomas Armat. They had made
modifications to Jenkins'
patented Phantoscope,
which cast
images via film and
electric light onto a wall or screen...
-
concentrated fully on the
development of his own
movie projector, the
Phantoscope. As the
Richmond Telegram reported on June 6, 1894,
about his endeavors...
-
Laboratories was
founded in by
Charles Francis Jenkins,
developer of the
Phantoscope, the
first commercial tv
station W3XK and the
first commercial television...
- The
magic lantern, also
known by its
Latin name
lanterna magica, was an
early type of
image projector that used pictures—paintings, prints, or photographs—on...
-
invented the
Phantoscope. They
showed the
Phantoscope to Raff & Gammon, who were
interested in it, so they
agreed for the
rights to the
Phantoscope. They later...
- In June 1894, in Portland, Oregon,
Charles Francis Jenkins used his
Phantoscope to
project his film
before an
audience of family,
friends and reporters...
- for a
patent for the
Phantoscope projector in
November 1894 and it was
issued in
March 1895. A
modified version of the
Phantoscope was
later sold to Thomas...
- Press. pp. 41–45. ISBN 978-0-252-02582-2. "Case Files:
Francis Jenkins (
Phantoscope)". The
Franklin Institute. 27 May 2016.
Archived from the
original on...
- They made
their first public projection using their invention,
named Phantoscope after an
earlier model designed by
Jenkins alone, in
September 1895 at...