According to the history of cameras, the first camera ever developed was called camera obscura later developed into daguerreotypes, calotypes, dry plates, film, and digital cameras. An Arab person named Ibn al-Haytham was the first ever person who created the camera. He published his Book of Optics in 1021 AD. He produced the first pinhole camera after observing how light travelled through a window shutter. He realized that smaller holes would create sharper images. He is also credited with…
Film was a very popular way to document history in the 1900's being very inexpensive and easy to handle. The Kodak combined these two things into a Camera that it's main purpose is to print photographs onto film. Main Idea 1: cameras Cameras help make the world make a better place, to documenting history or for entertainment, the camera and use of film fueled…
their struggles in a capitalist economy. Alinsky helped communities by empowering and educating them about their rights and power to bring balance in their society. I thought it was a genius move to have people from the community to buy stocks in the Kodak in order…
Introduction The very first fully digital camera came into existence in 1975. The camera was created by the Kodak inventor, Steve Sasson. Sasson pieced together the camera and took the first picture which was of his lab assistant. The picture was recorded on a cassette tape and displayed on a television screen. The first digital cameras sold commercially were small and could fit in the palm of your hand. Now we have everything from small hand held cameras to larger cameras with changeable lenses…
Eastman’s biography on Kodak.com, When he introduced the Kodak camera in 1888, he coined the slogan, "you press the button, we do the rest," and within a year, it became a well-known phrase in every household. His new process allowed for people to purchase cameras fully loaded with film, and send the camera back to Kodak in Rochester to be developed and reloaded with a new roll of film and sent back. For the next hundred or so years, Kodak and its rising competitors innovate and fine tune their…
History of Photography Although many may know what photography is, they do not know how far it has come from the beginning of its time. Photography, in itself, is one of the fastest growing hobbies in today’s world. Many believed it was “the killer of fine art” (Tolmachev) as it began to develop. The changes of photography and the people who have contributed to its advancement, have played a vital part in bringing it from its humble beginnings to its present day technological astonishment.…
In simple words a brand is a name, term ,logo ,design, symbol or combination of them that identify the seller and differentiate them from other competitor brands not only this brand refers to something that has created consciousness, status and fame in the marketplace For me brand is not very much important but it helps in identification of goods using lesser time thus no wastage of time occurs. In our country brands have somehow become important in identification of standard of living it…
leisure activity of photography” (Oliver, 2007, as cited in Ostroff, n.y.a.). Over the years, companies, such as Kodak, Sony or Canon, became trendsetters in the field of photography and strongly shaped the industry for many decades (Bellis, 2015a;…
negatives and hand-held cameras. In 1881 George Eastman and Henry Strong form a company known as Eastman Dry Plate Company and in 1888 the name Kodak was born which led to an increase in hand-held cameras. With this invention he also invented the flexible roll film made of cellulose nitrate that was used in many cameras making picture taking much easier and making Kodak one of the most famous companies of its time. In the 1940s color photography became a reality with the help of dyes and a bit…
while holding their camera in their hands. In 1888 George Eastman, an American dry-plate manufacturer, created the Kodak box camera. The Kodak was a miracle with all it’s features. For starters, the camera was handheld. It was also lightweight, inexpensive, and easy to operate. Kodak’s slogan was “You press the button, we do the rest”. This slogan was a way to show how simple the Kodak was. People took pictures and then brought them to a professional who would then develop them for…