A Window Into Walt Disney World's Most Beloved Attraction
Long before streaming services and home video let fans revisit their favorite Disney experiences at will, a small cardboard sleeve of glass-mounted 35mm slides was the closest thing to taking the ride home. The GAF Pana-Vue Pirates of the Caribbean Slide Set — WDW Set Two (catalog code WDW-24) is exactly that: five individual slides capturing the moody, lamp-lit interiors of one of Walt Disney World's most iconic attractions, pressed and packaged in the early years of the Magic Kingdom itself.
Produced through a licensing partnership between GAF Corporation and Walt Disney Productions, this set dates to the period between 1971 and 1975 — meaning these slides were sold when Walt Disney World was still a brand-new sensation, drawing millions of curious Americans to Central Florida for the first time. To hold this set is to hold a souvenir from the very dawn of the modern Disney theme park era.
The Attraction Behind the Slides
Pirates of the Caribbean has a storied place in Disney history. The original version at Disneyland opened in 1967 — one of the last attractions that Walt Disney himself personally guided through development — and the Walt Disney World version followed at the Magic Kingdom's opening in 1971. Unlike its California sibling, the Florida incarnation was designed from the outset to fit a more compact footprint, but it lost none of the atmosphere: the eerie bayou loading area, the misty battle past a besieged fort, and the raucous auction and treasure scenes that made the ride a beloved standard.
The scenes captured in this particular set — the treasure room and the jail sequence — represent two of the ride's most visually rich moments. The treasure room, piled with golden coins, jeweled cups, and the glittering spoils of plunder, was a technical marvel of the Audio-Animatronic era. The jail scene, in which a ring of imprisoned pirates attempts to coax a guard dog into surrendering his keys, became one of the most quotable and affectionately remembered gags in all of Disney park history. These slides preserve that original, pre-update version of the attraction with an intimacy that no official promotional photo can quite match.
GAF Corporation and the Pana-Vue Legacy
GAF Corporation — originally the General Aniline and Film Corporation — was a major American manufacturer of photographic products and consumer optical equipment throughout the mid-twentieth century. Their Pana-Vue slide viewers and companion slide sets became a fixture in American households during the 1960s and 1970s, and their partnership with Walt Disney Productions yielded dozens of licensed sets covering parks, animated features, and live-action films.
The format was simple and brilliant: a handful of high-quality 35mm color slides, each depicting a carefully selected scene, packaged in a compact sleeve that could be slipped into a Pana-Vue illuminated viewer for instant at-home magic. For a child who had just returned from a family vacation to the newly opened Walt Disney World, a set like WDW-24 was a prized possession — a way to revisit the darkened boat ride whenever nostalgia struck.
The heavy magenta color shift present in this set is a hallmark of slides from this era. Ektachrome and similar film stocks of the early 1970s are known to shift toward pink and red tones as they age, a natural consequence of the dye layers degrading at different rates over five decades. For many collectors, this warm, otherworldly cast is not a flaw but a feature — a visual fingerprint of age that makes the images feel genuinely antique, like faded postcards from another world.
Why Collectors Seek Out Early WDW Attraction Slides
The appeal of this set runs deep in the Disney collecting community for several reasons. First, it documents Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom in its earliest operational years, before any of the significant updates and re-theming that the ride would undergo over the following decades. Second, the GAF Pana-Vue format itself has a devoted following among vintage Disney enthusiasts and slide collectors who appreciate the tactile, analog quality of glass-mounted imagery. Third — and perhaps most importantly — sets like this one surface rarely in complete, intact form.
This particular set comes from a larger Disney estate collection, bringing with it the quiet authority of objects that were genuinely lived with and cherished rather than sealed away as investment pieces. The color shift, the wear on the sleeve, the faint sense of a family vacation preserved in miniature — these details are part of its character, not liabilities. Five slides. Five scenes. A ride that changed popular culture, captured in the first flush of its existence.
For the collector who appreciates early Walt Disney World ephemera, classic attraction memorabilia, or the particular magic of analog photography, WDW Set Two is a rare and evocative find.
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