MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Friday November 08, 2024
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, 09:44, 25 May 2011
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| == History == | | == History == |
| [[File:View from the Window at Le Gras by Joseph Nicéphore Niépce.jpg|thumb|right|235px|''View From the Window of Gras'' by Joseph Nicephore Niepce]] | | [[File:View from the Window at Le Gras by Joseph Nicéphore Niépce.jpg|thumb|right|235px|''View From the Window of Gras'' by Joseph Nicephore Niepce]] |
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| Frenchman, Joseph Nicephore Niepce,<ref>[http://niepce.house.museum/ Niepce.house.museum] | | Frenchman, Joseph Nicephore Niepce,<ref>[http://niepce.house.museum/ Niepce.house.museum] |
− | </ref> took the first photo in '''1826'''. It was taken in [[Paris]] and was called ''“View From the Window of Gras”'' <ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=vftTAAAAMAAJ&q=Joseph+Nicephore+Niepce+View+From+the+Window+of+Gras&dq=Joseph+Nicephore+Niepce+View+From+the+Window+of+Gras&client=safari&cd=3 Seizing the Light: A History of Photography] by Robert Hirsch</ref>. To achieve this, Joseph Niepce used a Camera Obscura and called the process Heliograph. The process never became practical for everyday use and could not be used for commercial purposes. | + | </ref> took the first photo in '''1826'''. It was taken in [[Paris]] and was called ''“View From the Window of Gras”''. <ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=vftTAAAAMAAJ&q=Joseph+Nicephore+Niepce+View+From+the+Window+of+Gras&dq=Joseph+Nicephore+Niepce+View+From+the+Window+of+Gras&client=safari&cd=3 Seizing the Light: A History of Photography] by Robert Hirsch</ref> To achieve this, Joseph Niepce used a Camera Obscura and called the process Heliograph. The process never became practical for everyday use and could not be used for commercial purposes. |
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| In 1839 Louis Jacques Daguerre (who worked with Joseph Niepce), announced a new photographic process called Daguerreotype to the [[France|French]] Academy. The process was more practical than ''Heliography'' and ushered in the photographic era. | | In 1839 Louis Jacques Daguerre (who worked with Joseph Niepce), announced a new photographic process called Daguerreotype to the [[France|French]] Academy. The process was more practical than ''Heliography'' and ushered in the photographic era. |
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| The flash intensity can be control on the flash itself although there are some that don’t. The exposure can be also control with the aperture. The larger aperture, the more light enters the camera. This then results in a shallower depth of field. | | The flash intensity can be control on the flash itself although there are some that don’t. The exposure can be also control with the aperture. The larger aperture, the more light enters the camera. This then results in a shallower depth of field. |
| + | [[File:200px-Camera obscura box.jpg|thumb|right|235px|Camera obscura]] |
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| == See also == | | == See also == |