gabrielaszalos Posted April 13, 2021 Share #1  Posted April 13, 2021 Advertisement (gone after registration) Hello friends 👋 I keep pondering more and more about buying a slide projector, but the thought of cutting my strips into pieces and putting them into plastic frames each time I want to view them on the projector is really putting me off. I am imagining all the frames that weren't selected to be framed and viewed, sleeved into my regular film plastic sleeves, impossible or very hard to remove later, and the amount of plastic frames piling up over time (not to speak of the difficulty of obtaining them). I only wish that this product would somehow accept a roll without being put into a frame. Does anyone understand what I mean? If you project slides, how do you manage it? Thank you. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Advertisement Posted April 13, 2021 Posted April 13, 2021 Hi gabrielaszalos, Take a look here Question for slide projectors. I'm sure you'll find what you were looking for!
Guest Posted April 13, 2021 Share #2  Posted April 13, 2021 52 minutes ago, gabrielaszalos said: putting them into plastic frames each time I want to view them on the projector is really putting me off. Each time? You only do this once. I actually like framing slides. It's the first time I find out if my ideas worked out as imagined. 52 minutes ago, gabrielaszalos said: I am imagining all the frames that weren't selected to be framed and viewed, sleeved into my regular film plastic sleeves I did this for a few years. Then I noticed that I never viewed any of my deselected slides again. From then on I only kept those slides that I thought were worth framing. I keep my 35mm slides in LKM magazines and my 6x7 slides in Kunze Journal magazines. I still have a sufficient stock of new slides frames and magazines.   Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
d30gaijin Posted February 16, 2022 Share #3 Â Posted February 16, 2022 Leica/Leitz did make a film roll adapter for some of their older slide projectors but I do not recall what the part number or name was called. Â It was not for any slide projector that used a tray to feed slides. Â Only for the old projectors that were fed single slides in just behind the projector lens. Â Not much help, sorry. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
ph. Posted February 17, 2022 Share #4  Posted February 17, 2022 Plastic frames with glass keeps the film flat when heated by the light. The more recent pradovit projectors, even the newer, less battleship-strong versions produced after Leitz bought the Zett werke, have better illumination systems than the old prado projectors. Also, the 90mm Colorplan, (Elmarit type) optics are far better than the ancient ones, so for unmatched experience of your past snapshots, the pradovit P2002 or the ,many quite similar ones with other names with the colorplan P2 is the one to get. Probably quite cheap by now since very few use analog projectors (but then they have not experienced how much better than digital projectors they are. p. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RussF78704 Posted June 26, 2024 Share #5  Posted June 26, 2024  Years ago, I bought a box of 35mm glass slide film mounts. Not sure if these are still available but possibly on websites like Ebay. I bought two Pradix projectors on Ebay, including one with the 50mm "wide angle" lens and projector. I also bought a Pradix "chassis" for parts. Hope my wife doesn't find this stuff.   Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now