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Photography Timeline

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Title: Photography Timeline


1
Photography Timeline
  • The Eriksen Version

2
5th Century
  • Greek philosophers describe the optical
    principles of the camera obscura

3
The camera obscura (Latin for 'dark room')
  • is an optical device that projects an image of
    its surroundings on a screen. It is used in
    drawing and for entertainment, and was one of the
    inventions that led to photography. The device
    consists of a box or room with a hole in one
    side.
  • Light from an external scene passes through the
    hole and strikes a surface inside where it is
    reproduced, upside-down, but with color and
    perspective preserved.
  • The image can be projected onto paper, and can
    then be traced to produce a highly accurate
    representation.

4
1553
  • Giovanni Battista Porta publishes details of
    construction and use of the camera obscura. It is
    first used to view solar eclipses

5
1664-1666
  • Isaac Newton discovers that white light is
    composed of different colors

6
1725-1727
  • Johann Heinrich Schulze discovers and experiments
    with the darkening action of light on mixtures of
    chalk and silver nitrate

7
1806
  • William Hyde Wollaston invents the camera lucida

8
Camera Lucida
  • performs an optical superimposition of the
    subject being viewed upon the surface upon which
    the artist is drawing.
  • The artist sees both scene and drawing surface
    simultaneously, as in a photographic double
    exposure. This allows the artist to duplicate key
    points of the scene on the drawing surface, thus
    aiding in the accurate rendering of perspective.
  • At times, the artist can even trace the outlines
    of objects.

9
1814-1826
  • Joseph Nicéphore Niépce achieves his first
    photographic image with a camera obscura

10
One of the two earliest known evidences of
photographic activity, taken by Nicéphore Niépce
in 1825 by the heliograph process
11
1819
  • John Herschel discovers the photographic
    fixative, hyposulfite of soda and coined the term
    photography.

12
1825
  • Peter Mark Roget demonstrates the persistence of
    vision with his Thaumatrope

13
Thaumatrope
  • is a toy that was popular in Victorian times. A
    disk or card with a picture on each side is
    attached to two pieces of string. When the
    strings are twirled quickly between the fingers
    the two pictures appear to combine into a single
    image due to persistence of vision.
  • Roget, who used one to demonstrate persistence of
    vision to the Royal College of Physicians in
    London in 1824. He based his invention on ideas
    of the astronomer John Herschel and the geologist
    William Henry Fitton.
  • The coined name translates roughly as "wonder
    turner" in modern Greek.

14
1826
  • Joseph Nicéphore Niépce uses bitumen of Judea for
    photographs on metal, makes the first successful
    camera photograph on a pewter plate View From
    My Window at Gras - a direct positive he called
    a heliograph. Exposure was approximately eight
    hours.

15
View From My Window at Gras
16
1832-33
  • Image animation novelties Phenakistoscope and
    Zoetrope invented

17
1837
  • Daguerre's first daguerreotype

18
Daguerreotype
  • in which the image is exposed directly onto a
    mirror-polished surface of silver bearing a
    coating of silver halide particles deposited by
    iodine vapor.
  • In later developments bromine and chlorine vapors
    were also used, resulting in shorter exposure
    times.
  • The daguerreotype is a negative image, but the
    mirrored surface of the metal plate reflects the
    image and makes it appear positive in the proper
    light.
  • Thus, daguerreotype is a direct photographic
    process without the capacity for duplication.

19
1840
  • Alexander Wolcott issued first American patent in
    photography for his camera

20
1846
  • Carl Zeiss opens optical instrument factory in
    Germany
  • First known photograph, a daguerreotype, is taken
    of The White House and President (Polk) and First
    Lady by John Plumbe, Jr.

21
1856
  • Photojournalism of Crimean War by Roger Fenton,
    James Robertson, and Carol Popp de Scathmari
  • Thomson takes the first underwater photograph at
    a depth of 5 feet

22
Photojournalism
  • is a particular form of journalism (the
    collecting, editing, and presenting of news
    material for publication or broadcast) that
    creates images in order to tell a news story.
  • It is now usually understood to refer only to
    still images, and in some cases to video used in
    broadcast journalism or for personal use.

23
1871
  • Pigeons used to carry micro photographed messages
    across enemy lines in Franco-Prussian War.

24
1872
  • John W. Hyatt begins manufacturing celluloid with
    the intention of manufacturing billiard balls,
    which until that time were made from ivory.

25
Muybridge
  • begins photographic motion studies and continues
    project until 1887 the first photographs are of
    a horse in motion

26
Platinotype
  • are photographic prints made by a monochrome
    printing process that provides the greatest tonal
    range of any printing method using chemical
    development.
  • Unlike the silver print process, platinum lies on
    the paper surface, while silver lies in a gelatin
    or albumen emulsion that coats the paper. As a
    result, since no gelatin emulsion is used, the
    final platinum image is absolutely matte with a
    deposit of platinum (and/or palladium, its sister
    element which is also used in most platinum
    photographs) absorbed slightly into the paper.1

27
1873
  • The platinotype process is patented by Willis in
    England

After development
Before development
28
1888
  • Eastman markets the Kodak camera and roll film-
  • "You Press The Button and We Do The Rest."

29
1889
  • George Eastman applies for patent on
    motion-picture roll film

30
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31
1891
  • The first telephoto lenses begin to appear

32
1893
  • Thomas Alva Edison patents the kinetoscope

33
Kinetoscope
  • The Kinetoscope is an early motion picture
    exhibition device. Though not a movie
    projectorit was designed for films to be viewed
    individually through the window of a cabinet
    housing its componentsthe Kinetoscope introduced
    the basic approach that would become the standard
    for all cinematic projection before the advent of
    video.
  • It creates the illusion of movement by conveying
    a strip of perforated film bearing sequential
    images over a light source with a high-speed
    shutter.

34
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinetoscope
35
1900
  • First mass-marketed camera, The Brownie

36
  • is the name of a long-running and extremely
    popular series of simple and inexpensive cameras
    made by Eastman Kodak.
  • The Brownie popularized low-cost photography and
    introduced the concept of the snapshot. The first
    Brownie, introduced in February, 1900,1 was a
    very basic cardboard box camera with a simple
    meniscus lens that took 2¼-inch square pictures
    on 117 rollfilm.
  • With its simple controls and initial price of 1,
    it was intended to be a camera that anyone could
    afford and use, leading to the popular slogan,
    "You push the button, we do the rest."
  • The camera was named after the popular cartoons
    created by Palmer Cox.

37
1904
  • The Lumiere brothers announce the production of
    Autochrome plates for making camera images in
    full color

38
1913
  • Eastman Kodak Company establishes first
    industrial photographic research laboratory

39
1935
  • Eastman Kodak markets Kodachrome film

40
Kodachrome
  • is the trademarked brand name of a type of color
    reversal film that was manufactured by Eastman
    Kodak from 1935 to 2009.
  • Kodachrome was the first successfully
    mass-marketed color still film using a
    subtractive method, in contrast to earlier
    additive "screenplate" methods such as Autochrome
    and Dufaycolor, and remained the oldest brand of
    color film.
  • On June 22, 2009 Eastman Kodak Co. announced the
    end of Kodachrome production, citing declining
    demand.

41
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42
1948
  • Edwin Land markets the Polaroid camera

43
Digital Cameras
The first recorded attempt at building a digital
camera was in 1975 by Steven Sasson, an engineer
at Eastman Kodak. It used the then-new
solid-state CCD image sensor chips developed by
Fairchild Semiconductor in 1973. The camera
weighed 8 pounds (3.6 kg), recorded black and
white images to a cassette tape, had a resolution
of 0.01 megapixels (10,000 pixels), and took 23
seconds to capture its first image in December
1975. The prototype camera was a technical
exercise, not intended for production.
44
1987
  • Eastman Kodak enters the electronic still-video
    market with seven products for recording,
    storing, manipulating, transmitting and printing
    electronic still video images

45
1988
  • Sony and Fuji announce new digital cameras
  • Eastman Kodak announces a 4 megapixel CCD
  • PhotoMac is the first image manipulation program
    available for the Macintosh computer

46
1990
  • Adobe Photoshop 1.0 (TM) is the second
    professional image manipulation program available
    for Macintosh computers
  • Eastman Kodak prototypes an electronic camera
    back designed for the needs of photojournalists

47
1993
  • Adobe Photoshop is available for MS-DOS/Windows
    platforms

48
TODAY
  • 5 minute free write
  • What is photography today?
  • ?
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