The choreutoscope is the first pre-cinema device which employed a system similar to early film projectors. [1] It was the first projection device to use an intermittent movement, which became the basis of many cine cameras and projectors. It was formed by a sheet of glass on which different drawings were made, and the sheet was mounted on a type off Maltese cross mechanism, which made the image move suddenly. [2] The most common drawing was the 'dancing skeleton' in which six sequential images of a skeleton were animated in the viewing pane.
The choreutoscope was invented by Lionel Smith Beale in 1866. [1] Beale used it for demonstrations at the Royal Polytechnic. However, Beale was not the only one to create a choreutoscope, a few years later William C. Hughes created his own choreutoscope in 1884, and B. Brown created a similar machine in 1896.
The choreutoscope is the first pre-cinema device which employed a system similar to early film projectors. [1] It was the first projection device to use an intermittent movement, which became the basis of many cine cameras and projectors. It was formed by a sheet of glass on which different drawings were made, and the sheet was mounted on a type off Maltese cross mechanism, which made the image move suddenly. [2] The most common drawing was the 'dancing skeleton' in which six sequential images of a skeleton were animated in the viewing pane.
The choreutoscope was invented by Lionel Smith Beale in 1866. [1] Beale used it for demonstrations at the Royal Polytechnic. However, Beale was not the only one to create a choreutoscope, a few years later William C. Hughes created his own choreutoscope in 1884, and B. Brown created a similar machine in 1896.