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By Luke Baldwin
16

Home learning

Jul 08, 2015

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Page 1: Home learning

By Luke Baldwin

Page 2: Home learning

Johann Heinrich Schulz discovered that a substance called silver nitrate would change colour when exposed to light. This paved the way for the first pictures to be taken and processed.

Page 3: Home learning

Joseph Niepce developed the camera obscura and took the first photo with it. It wasn't ideal, though, because it took 8 hours of light exposure to make a picture, and the picture faded with time.

Page 4: Home learning

Louis Daguerre invented a new way to take pictures. It only needed 30 minutes of light exposure, and the image didn't fade with time.

Page 5: Home learning

William Henry Talbot developed the Calotype process. This made it possible to make multiple copies of the same picture.

Page 6: Home learning

With the new Collodion process, cameras only needed a few seconds of light exposure to make a picture.

Page 7: Home learning

Up until this time pictures had to be developed immediately after being taken. Richard Leach Maddox invented the gelatine dry plate silver bromide process, which made it possible to take a picture and develop it later.

Page 8: Home learning

George Eastman invented the first roll-film camera.

Page 9: Home learning

The Polaroid allowed people to take a photo and have it developed immediately, right from the camera.

Page 10: Home learning

Coloured film is introduced.

Page 11: Home learning

The Sasson Company built the first digital camera.

Page 12: Home learning

Sony put out the first consumer camcorder, allowing people to record their memories in real time.

Page 13: Home learning

Canon put out the first digital camera for the public, which was later improved by Pixar.

Page 14: Home learning

The camera phone technology was first used in Japan, but it quickly spread around the world

Page 15: Home learning

Kodak put out their Easy Share digital camera, which made it easy to snap pictures and download them to the computer.

Page 16: Home learning

Kodak put out cameras that didn't have to be connected to a computer in order to download and share the pictures.