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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › KaleidoscopeKaleidoscope - Wikipedia

    A kaleidoscope (/ kəˈlaɪdəskoʊp /) is an optical instrument with two or more reflecting surfaces (or mirrors) tilted to each other at an angle, so that one or more (parts of) objects on one end of these mirrors are shown as a regular symmetrical pattern when viewed from the other end, due to repeated reflection.

  2. The Giant Kaleidoscope is in a grain silo to an old dairy farm from the 1800s. The mirrors are almost 38 feet high, silo is nearly 60 feet high, and it weighs 5,000 lbs. The images to the show are created by film and music people and projected through the top of the mirrors, the mirrors kaleidoscope the images for an amazing experience.

    • (36)
    • Attraction
    • Sir David Brewster's Invention
    • Charles Bush's Improvements
    • How Kaleidoscopes Work

    Brewster named his invention after the Greek words kalos (beautiful), eidos (form), and scopos (watcher). So kaleidoscope roughly translates to beautiful form watcher. Brewster's kaleidoscope was a tube containing loose pieces of colored glass and other pretty objects, reflected by mirrors or glass lenses set at angles, that created patterns when v...

    In the early 1870s, Charles Bush, a Prussiannative living in Massachusetts, improved upon the kaleidoscope and started the kaleidoscope fad. Charles Bush was granted patents in 1873 and 1874 related to improvements in kaleidoscopes, kaleidoscope boxes, objects for kaleidoscopes (US 143,271), and kaleidoscope stands. Charles Bush was the first perso...

    The kaleidoscope creates reflections of a direct view of the objects at the end of a tube, through the use of angled mirrors set at the end; as the user rotates the tube, the mirrors create new patterns. The image will be symmetrical if the mirror angle is an even divider of 360 degrees. A mirror set at 60 degrees will generate a pattern of six reg...

    • Mary Bellis
  3. Kaleidoscopes are portals of remembrance that open onto the familiar, yet unexpected. Allowing the eye to marvel, the mind to explore, and the heart to leap, these mirrored tubes of magic have developed into a significant new art form. Since its invention by Sir David Brewster in 1816, the kaleidoscope has fulfilled a variety of functions.

  4. A kaleidoscope is an optical instrument with at least two reflecting surfaces inclined to one another in a point. So at least one portion of objects toward one side of the mirrors is viewed as a normal even. The reflectors (or mirrors) are normally encased in a cylinder.

  5. Kaleidoscope, optical device consisting of mirrors that reflect images of bits of coloured glass in a symmetrical geometric design through a viewer. The design may be changed endlessly by rotating the section containing the loose fragments.

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  7. Jun 3, 2022 · Construction of kaleidoscope: Take three numbers of mirrored perspex and roll them with the help of the tape and form it in a shape of triangle. Check and verify the firmness of the perspex and also tape it from the outside of the triangle. Draw a small triangle which is located at the edge to the overhead transparent paper.