The history of flim

  • Joseph nicephor

    Joseph nicephor
    In 1827 joseph nicephore made the first photographic image with a obscura camera that uses light to project the picture.
  • Louis Daguerre

    Louis Daguerre
    Louis Daguerre first pratical process potography in 1829 he formed a partnership with Joseph Nicephore Niepce.
  • William George Horner

    William George Horner
    Introduced Zoetrope which is a 19th-century optical toy consisting of a cylinder with a series of pictures on the inner surface.
  • Henry Fox Talbo

    Henry Fox Talbo
    Henry Fox Talbo makes a important advancement in photography by introducing negatives on paper instead of glass.
  • intermittent mechanisms

    intermittent mechanisms
    the invention of the intermittent mechanisms was used to which film is regularly advanced and then held in place for a brief duration of time in a movie camera or movie projector.
  • Frederick Scoff Archer

    Frederick Scoff Archer
    Frederick Scoff Archer created wet plates using a viscious soultion of collodion he coated glass with light senstive sliver salt.
  • Tintypes

    Tintypes
    Hamilton Smith created tintypes he also help the process of photography tintypes a thin sheet of iron was used to provide a base for light senstive material,making a postive image.
  • Emile Reynaud

    Emile Reynaud
    introduces Praxinoscope which is used a strip of pictures placed around the inner surface of a spinning cylinder.
  • Dry plate

    Dry plate
    Dry plate was a glass negative plate with dried gelitain emulision. Dry plates could be stored for a period of time. Photographers didnt need portable darkrooms.
  • Etienne Jules Marey

    Etienne Jules Marey
    Etienne Jules Marey studied the movements of animals and began his own experiments and led to the creation of the photographic gun.
  • George Eastman

    George Eastman
    George Eastman invented flim with a flexible base that unbreakable and could be rolled.
  • R.W. Paul

     R.W. Paul
    invented a projector which began by showing copies of Acres' films from the previous year.