Lisa Frist, Thayne Branch Library

Lisa Frist
National Camera Day is observed annually on June 29 in order to honor one of the most monumental inventions in history: the camera. Since its inception, the camera has offered the opportunity to capture everything from important historical moments to recording the images of cherished family members.
The camera has a very long history. In 1604 the term “camera obscura” was first used for a device that projected an image. A camera obscura is the natural phenomenon in which light passing through the small hole of a box will project an image of a scene outside the box onto the surface opposite to the hole, resulting in an inverted and reversed projection of the view outside.
Although the term, “camera obscura” was first coined in 1604, there is much evidence that other similar effects of the camera obscura were possibly used as far back in human history as prehistoric times. There are theories that camera obscura inspired paleolithic cave paintings. Distortions in the shapes of animals in many paleolithic cave artworks might be inspired by simple camera obscura effects of a tiny hole in a tent or an animal skin.
There were many other notable personages that investigated the workings of the camera obscura. One in particular was Leonardo Da Vinci who was clearly very interested in the camera obscura. Over the years he drew approximately 270 diagrams of the camera obscura in his notebooks.
The Dutch Masters, in particular Johannes Vermeer, were suspected of using the camera obscura for his indoor pictorial scenes
The first photograph was made in 1862 by Nicephore Niepce who captured the first permanent photograph using heligraphy. It took hours of exposure to produce, but changed history forever.
In 1839 Louis Daguerre created the daguerreotype. The clearer image and shorter exposure time meant ordinary people could make photos.
Mathew Brady, an American photographer in the 1860’s was most noted for his documentation of the American Civil War. For the first time people could see real battle photos, and the aftermath of such battlefield devastation. Brady was known as Lincoln’s Camera Man because he also took many photos of President Lincoln.
George Eastman brought the Kodak Revolution in 1888 with his Kodak roll-film camera.
Polaroid introduced instant cameras in 1948 and the first digital camera was built by Steve Sasson in 1975. Check out: The Complete Guide to Digital Photography 775 Freeman
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