Can anyone ID these antique(?) colour filters?

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Helge

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Definitely not lanterna magica.
Twenties at the earliest tenths.
The finish, the flocking, the font etc. can’t possibly be nineteenth century.
It’s a style thing, and the evident level of mass manufacture points to early twentieth century.

What’s the room at the front and the back of the box? Can’t be just a buffer.

Cokin like filters for some kind of holder?
 
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Iain P

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Yes, the slot does look like a holder doesn't it? George Auckland at the Magic Lantern Society kindly responded to my enquiry ages ago, but I only just spotted his reply in my Spam box this evening, and he confirms that they are not lantern slides:

"Your slides are a bit of a mystery. At 1.5 inches square they are too
small to be normal lantern slides. Also the density is high implying a lot
of light. I have a couple of ideas.

1. They are samples for supplying glass for stained glass
windows,domestic,churches or commercial.

2. They are scientific glasses for viewing hot flames and incandescent
objects.

We have a member who is a glass artist. I will copy her into this email to
see if she can suggest anything."
 
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Iain P

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They arrived Monday morning & the light was poor during Monday & Tuesday lunchtimes so I didn't have too many distractions. :smile:
I've got visitors at work the next couple of days so might not be able to get to the post office till the weekend.

It might help a little to share something I noted on the colours the average person perceives for which wavelengths:
Violet 390-455nm
Blue 455-492nm
Green 492-577nm
Yellow 577-597nm
Orange 597-622nm
Red 622-780nm

The colours shown in the spectra are only to identify different filters & do not reflect the visual appearance

Sensitivity at the extremes is very much lower & can vary significantly with age etc. Another source gave total sensitivity as 100x better at 550nm than at 400nm or 700nm...
Yet another source showing sensitivty of human rods & cones in the eye only covered the range 400-710nm closer to the normally quoted visual range. This showed blue cones being 10-20x more sensitive in the mid range than at either end, with green & red cones this went up to 200x but a much wider wavelength range was seen.

Sorry I didn't note the sources for this info, just logged it for my own reference at various points over the last 10 years. I'm a great one for hoarding data :smile:

As an amateur astronomer, I'm sadly very aware of the lack of sensitivity of the eye to the red end of the spectrum! Most emission nebulae are about 90% hydrogen, and H-alpha light has a wavelength of 656 nm, so the eye struggles to see it at all, even through large telescopes. The famous Horse Head nebula remained stubbornly invisible to me even through a half-metre diameter reflector scope with a H-a filter. Your data nicely explain why the view though the telescope of deep sky objects is mostly pale green /blue.
 

Petrochemist

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Yes, the slot does look like a holder doesn't it? George Auckland at the Magic Lantern Society kindly responded to my enquiry ages ago, but I only just spotted his reply in my Spam box this evening, and he confirms that they are not lantern slides:

"Your slides are a bit of a mystery. At 1.5 inches square they are too
small to be normal lantern slides. Also the density is high implying a lot
of light. I have a couple of ideas.

1. They are samples for supplying glass for stained glass
windows,domestic,churches or commercial.

2. They are scientific glasses for viewing hot flames and incandescent
objects.

We have a member who is a glass artist. I will copy her into this email to
see if she can suggest anything."

I can't believe they'd be samples for stained glass, there is clearly a film sandwiched between two glass plates.
The second option sounds highly plausible & would fit well with the very dark nature of the filters. Kodak books certainly refer to similar filters as for scientific use.
 

Petrochemist

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I've finally tracked down my Kodak filters handbook which only adds a little on the monochromat set (which appears to be what these are)
'For isolating light of narrow wavelength bands, for the determination of colour absorption factors, colour sensitivity & similar data'
 
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