Chapter 2 Inventions and Origins 77
Sprocket holes – Th ese are the small, regular holes on the sides of a strip of
fi lm that the camera uses to move the fi lm forward. For 35-millimeter fi lm,
there are normally four holes per frame; for 16-millimeter fi lm, there is one
hole per frame.
Superimposition – Th e application of two or more images in the same space
of the frame simultaneously, as in double exposure.
Trim bin – An open-topped container designed to store individual pieces
of fi lm during the editing process. Supports at either end of the bin hold a
crossbar that has many thin hooks on which fi lm strips can be hung using
sprocket holes.
Videotape – A motion picture medium in which image and sound are recorded
on a magnetic tape by a video camera.
Zoetrope – Although similar devices appeared centuries earlier in China, the
European development of what became known as the Zoetrope occurred in
1834 by William Horner. Th is cylinder spins on a base and the viewer looks
through holes in its sides to see the moving image of the illustrated band
below the slits on the cylinder’s interior.
Zoopraxiscope – A device that combined elements of the zoetrope and the
magic lantern. Th e early zoopraxiscope presented a continuously moving row
of images, and the later zoopraxiscope presented a series of quickly passing
shuttered views of single frames.
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