Prestwich Camera

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File:Herbert G. Ponting and his camera - H.G.P. LCCN2009633374.jpg
CitationClass=web }}</ref> He incorporated some of the footage he shot into his the 1924 documentary The Great White Silence.

Prestwich Camera was a cine camera produced by the Prestwich Manufacturing Company. It was eventually fitted with external magazines capable of holding up Template:Convert of film. Several types of "Prestwich Camera" were manufactured in the late 19th century. One of the earliest designs of this type held Template:Convert of film—more film than any other camera of the age.

According to Carl Louis Gregory,

An advertisement in Hopwood's "Living Pictures" edition of 1899 offers the "Prestwich" specialties for animated photography -- "nine different models of cameras and projectors in three sizes for l/2-inch, 1 3/8-inch and 2 3/8-inch width of film."

See also

History of cinema

References

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