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The camera can be said to be everywhere in our lives, it can record some of our beautiful moments, so who invented it? In 1983, Daguerre of France manufactured the first practical silver disk camera, and the next step will be to tell you how he invented this silver disk camera.
Daguerre is a French artist and chemist, he studied architectural drama design and panoramas, painting is particularly good at making stage illusion effects, and because he is good at making stage illusion effects, so his reputation is more outstanding and he has been able to show since he was a child that Daguerre is a French artist and chemist, he has studied architectural drama design and panoramas, painting is particularly good at making stage illusion effects, and he is also very famous because he is good at making stage illusion effects. And he was able to show his amazing talent for painting since he was a child, especially he was very good at drawing people, and the portraits he painted were vivid. Through the experience he gained while painting, he wondered if there was something that could be quickly imaged, and he often asked himself this question, and he thought about it for a long time.
Later, Daguerre and Nieps cooperated for 4 years, just to study photographic technology, and with the passage of time, their new photographic method also matured day by day, but then Nieps died of illness in Paris, which almost made Daguerre collapse, but after a period of contemplation, he calmed down and continued to work experimentally, his spirit of struggle is also very worthy of our learning, and then after 10 years of unremitting efforts, In 1837, Daguerre successfully invented a practical photographic technique called Daguerre photography, which was the world's first successful photographic method.
The basic idea of this camera is to make a copper plate with silver iodide on the surface** and then steam it with mercury vapor and orient it with an ordinary salt solution to form a permanent imaging machine. Daguerre's invention was great, and he was basically similar to the camera we use today, consisting of a lens, an aperture, a shutter, a viewfinder and a camera obscura.
As the world's first camera, it was very important, and although it looked very bulky, it really left a strong mark on history.
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Daguerre, at the beginning, had a wooden box, and then through the wooden box, you can get an image of a human face, which is the most primitive appearance.
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The French painter Daguerre, known as the "father of modern photography", invented photocopy, also known as Daguerre's photographic method. Daguerre was a good painter, and then he wondered if there was a way to fix the picture faster than painting, and after working hard with his friends, he finally invented photography, which was the earliest practical method of photography.
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Daguerre, the man who invented the camera, the first camera was a portable wooden box camera, which was carried out in the way of **.
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In 1839, France's Daguerre made the first practical daguerreotype camera, which consisted of two wooden boxes, one wooden box was inserted into the other wooden box for focusing, and the lens cover was used as a shutter to control the ** time of up to 30 minutes, which could shoot clear images.
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The world's first camera, invented by the Frenchman Nisèvres Nieps in 1826, has the appearance of a simple wooden box, and with the help of the imaging principle of camera obscura, it "shot" the world's first permanent **, which represents the "birth of photography."
In fact, this camera can only be regarded as a prototype of the camera, and it has not realized photosensitive imaging, and what really makes photo studios mushroom after a rain is the silver plate camera invented by the Frenchman Daguerre.
The year 1839, when Daguerre's invention was made public, is also known as the year of the birth of photography.
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The Greek philosopher Aristotle of the third century BC described a small hole in a dark house in which light appeared to be shadowed. In 1516, Leonard da Vince of Italy recorded the study of the image obscura. In 1611, the German Johnnec Kepler invented the adhesive lens in which two lenses with concave and convex lenses are bonded into one piece.
In 1666, Isaac Newton experimented with a three-beam mirror and discovered the phenomenon of hepticolor scattering of light. These great discoveries of mankind led to the invention of the European painting camera obscura, which used light passing through a lens to form an image for sketching, which was the earliest prototype of the camera. However, this is only limited to the formation of images, and how to preserve images has not yet reached a mature stage.
In 1837, the French stage artist Daguerre invented a photographic technique that can preserve the image with the chemical silver salt, which will change when exposed to light, called daguerreotype. Da Caire's initiative was made public in August 1839 when France** bought the rights to his invention to the world. Within a few years, daguerreotype photography quickly became popular in European countries and the world's advanced countries.
This is why most people recognize this era as the birth of photography.
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