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A rare early 20th Century Charles Urban / G A Smith mahogany and brass hand-crank 35mm Kinemacolor Motion Picture Camera, built by Moy & Bastie, with brass plate engraved ‘Kinemacolor No. 132 Urban-Smith Patents 26671 - 1906, 8548-1909, Natural Colour Kinematograph Co Ltd, Wardour St, London W‘, with Pathe Freres Serie Superieure 80mm lens, and two wooden magazines, circa 1910, body G, elements F, viewfinder altered to internal type in period, with restoration, including filter wheel (accurately copied from example in National Media Museum, Bradford), crank handle and some brasswork and screws; with a British oak and aluminium cinema camera tripod, with crank-operated pan and tilt head, circa 1920; Kinemacolor was the first successful colour motion picture process that was used in the UK from 1908 to 1914 and it revolutionised the film industry. It was invented by George Albert Smith of Brighton, England in 1906 and launched in cooperation with Anglo-American film producer/distributor Charles Urban. Urban was one of the most significant figures in British cinema before the First World War. Urban Trading Co. was based in Wardour Street and was the first film business to be located in what became the home of the British film industry. Very few of these cameras are known to exist and each one in a sample group appear to be different, suggesting that they were made to order
Leica Apo Televid 62 spotting scope, serial no. 222077, with Hoya 62mm UV filter, with a T77: 40x WW / T62: 32 x WW ocular, both boxed. Condition report: Occasional very minor scracthes to the enamel finish, small marks to enamel around the shoe from mounting on a tripod. The lenses are a little dusty but do not show signs of scratches or damages. The boxes show signs of wear.

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