In 1826 a French inventor, Joseph Nicephore Niepce burned the first permanent photograph using heliography, also known as sun drawing. To accomplish that, he used a wooden box to take photographs. Niepce and another man came up with a process of photos called Daguerreotype process in 1836. They would coat copper place with silver and treat it with iodine vapor to create his sun drawings. The plate would be sensitive to light, so exposing the photo after it’s taken to mercury vapor or just salt, the image would show up. But later on, the first pinhole image was taken by a Scottish scientist name, Sir David Brewster. He took his first image in 1850s. He was also writing a book at the time and wrote in his book and wrote out pinhole as
In 1826 a French inventor, Joseph Nicephore Niepce burned the first permanent photograph using heliography, also known as sun drawing. To accomplish that, he used a wooden box to take photographs. Niepce and another man came up with a process of photos called Daguerreotype process in 1836. They would coat copper place with silver and treat it with iodine vapor to create his sun drawings. The plate would be sensitive to light, so exposing the photo after it’s taken to mercury vapor or just salt, the image would show up. But later on, the first pinhole image was taken by a Scottish scientist name, Sir David Brewster. He took his first image in 1850s. He was also writing a book at the time and wrote in his book and wrote out pinhole as