In the early days of television, there were two types of slides for broadcast—a transparent slide or transparency, and an opaque slide, or Balop Transparency slides were prepared as 2-inch square cards mounted in cardboard or glass, or 4" by 3.25" film, surrounded by a half-inch of masking on all four sides. Opaque, "Balop" slides were cards on 4" by 3" stock or larger that were photographed by the use of a Balopticon. Opaque cards were popular as shooting a card on a stand often caused keystoning problems. A fixed size and axis would ensure no geometric distortion.
Telop Models
The Gray Company introduced the original Telop in 1949 The dual projector unit offered both transparent and opaque projection. The standard sizes were used for both transparent and card slides, but they could also be made on 35mm film, on 4" x 3.25" glass, or on film cards. The third and fourth units on the Telop were attachments with a vertical ticker-tape type roll strip that could be typed on and a horizontal unit similar to a small teleprompter used for title "crawls." By 1952, when the Telop II was introduced, CBS and NBC were using Telop machines in combination with TV cameras to permit instant fading from one object to another by superimposition. The Telop II was a smaller version of the original model for new TV stations on a budget and featured two openings rather than the original four. At the same time, Gray also developed a Telojector, a gun-turret style slide projector for 2" x 2" slides which had two projectors, facilitating easier lap dissolves between the two. The Telop III was introduced in 1954, was a refinement of the previous makes. Reduced to a single-channel version of the Telop, the Telop III also added a remote-control for switching up to 50 cards and added heat filters for opaque cards. Automation was the emphasis for this model, as was a tie in with the Polaroid Camera Co., in which Polaroid instant photographs could be used in a Telop for on-site use.
Genericized trademark
Because of its popularity, the Telop became a catch-all term for large-formatslide projectors and opaque cards, even after the Gray Company stopped manufacturing Telop projectors. The term telop is used in Japan to indicate text superimposed on a screen, such as captions, subtitles, or scrolling tickers.