Luna Leederville
155 Oxford Street,
Leederville,
WA
6007
1 person favorited this theater
Uploaded By
More Photos of This Theater
Photo Info
Taken on: July 13, 2007
Uploaded on: January 26, 2021
Exposure: 1/20 sec, f/8.0, ISO 100
Camera: Canon Canon EOS-1Ds Mark II
Software: Adobe Photoshop CS2 Windows
Size: 83.7 KB
Views: 668
Full EXIF: View all
Image width: 4800
Image length: 3636
Bits per sample: 16
Compression: 1
Photometric interpretation: 1
Image description: Photographic Negative -Glass
Make: Canon
Model: Canon EOS-1Ds Mark II
Samples per pixel: 1
X resolution: 75/1
Y resolution: 75/1
Resolution unit: 2
Software: Adobe Photoshop CS2 Windows
Date time: 2007-11-06 12:33:35 +0000
Exposure time: 1/20
F number: 8/1
Exposure program: 3
ISO speed ratings: 100
Date time original: 2007-07-13 10:33:39 +0000
Date time digitized: 2007-07-13 10:33:39 +0000
Shutter speed value: 1/19
Aperture value: 8.0
Exposure bias value: 0/1
Max aperture value: 3/1
Metering mode: 5
Flash: 16
Focal length: 100/1
Color space: 65535
Pixel X dimension: 541
Pixel Y dimension: 435
Focal plane x resolution: 250400/71
Focal plane y resolution: 666800/189
Focal plane resolution unit: 2
Custom rendered: 0
Exposure mode: 0
White balance: 1
Scene capture type: 0
New Oxford Cinema 155 Oxford Street, Leederville, WA - 1929 - The New Oxford first for Talkies.
The Daily News (Newspaper) (Perth, WA) Sat 21 Sep 1929 Page 6
Talkies for the suburbs
Caption: . Mr Borthwick, chief installation engineer, and Mr Waghorn, chief projectionist who have arrived to install “Raycophone” the only Australian 100 per cent reproducing sound invention. The first suburban theatres to be wired will be the New Oxford Theatre at Leederville, and the Premier Theatre at East Perth. Part of the beginning of the talkies in WA.
Raycophone Sound
Raycophone was perfected by Mr. Ray Allsop, a young Sydney engineer, who came into prominence originally as research engineer for 2BL broadcasting station in Sydney. By June 1937 Raycophone sound-projection systems were installed in 345 theatres.
Photo credit – Truth newspaper collection & The State Library of WA – Contributed by Greg Lynch –
1 person favorited this photo