2. THE CAMERA OBSCURA
The camera obscura is an optical device
That projects an image of its surroundings
onto a screen inside. The image appears
upside down and the camera obscura only
Works on a sunny day.
The image can be projected onto paper,
And then traced to make an accurate
representation. Using mirrors as in the 18th
century you would be able to flip the image so it was the right way up.
Another more portable type is a box with an angled mirror projecting onto
tracing paper placed on the glass top, the image being upright as viewed
from the back . The smaller the pinhole the sharper the image gets.
3. J. NICEPHORE NIEPCE 1826.
• A french inventor who was made famous by
developing the worlds first photograph in 1825.
His son Isidore formed a
partnership with Daguerre.
From Isidores’s partnership
with Daguerre came the
Dagurreotype.
Nicephore niepce and his first developed
picture.
4. SIR JOHN HERSHEL
Sir John Hershel
1867.
John Hershel was an English astronomer who wanted
make copies of his notes. He contributed massively to the
world of photography we know to day by creating the first
ever cyanotype (blueprint). He discovered sodium
thiosulfate to be a solvent of silver halides in 1819,
and informed Talbot and Daguerre of his discovery that
this "hyposulphite of soda" ("hypo") could be used as a
photographic fixer, to "fix" pictures and make them
permanent, after experimentally applying it thus in early
1839. His ground-breaking research on the subject was
read at the Royal Society in London in March 1839 and
January 1840.
5. HENRY FOX TALBOT
William Henry Fox Talbot was a British inventor William
and a photography pioneer who invented Henry Fox
The calotype process. Talbot's original Talbot.1864.
contributions included the concept of a
negative from which many positive prints can
be made even though the first concept of
Positive and negative was created by John
Hershel.
Latticed
window in
Lacock Abbey
in 1835 by
Talbot is a
print from the
oldest
Photographic
negative in
existance.