When
you see videos of the early developers of photography, it’s pretty funny
especially in light of photography today.
In those old movies, to get a picture, the camera was as big as a
computer is today. The photographer had
to put his head under a sheet and hold up a huge tripod which exploded with
smoke and fumes to make the flash.
Today
photography could not be more different.
In the movies, we used to be astonished when spies had cameras in their
watches or the soles of their shoes. But
now it is common for almost everyone to have a camera in their phone and to be
able to pull it out and snap a photo virtually anywhere.
Let’s
fill in a few gaps. We can go back to
the origins of the language to find that the word “photography” began in the
Greek times and it literally means “drawing with light. But the actual science of photography did not
really take off until the 1800’s in this country when a fellow by the name of
John Hershel applied the words “photography”, “positives” and “negatives” to
the task of producing pictures. We had
“negatives” of our photos from then until the dawn of digital photography in
the last few years.
For
most of us, though, the company Eastman Kodak is probably the one we associate
most with the early developments of photography. And it was the early pioneer of photography,
George Eastman that made the first advancements on the primitive methods being
used until his work in 1839. A little
trivia? Eastman made the name “Kodak” up
because he wanted his company name to begin with a “K”.
The
developments began to come along pretty routinely as photography began to
mature and become more sophisticated.
Color photography was developed in 1861 by a scientist named James Clark
Maxwell. Up until then all photographs
were black and white or monochrome. Color
photography was a huge leap forward but it really did not start to move into
the public arena until two brothers named Lumière in 1907 invented the color
plate.
Over
the decades to follow, photography moved forward steadily and moved out of the
world of science and then journalism and into each of our homes. But the revolution that has turned
photography into what we know it to be today occurred in 1981 when Sony
invented the first camera that worked without film. The digital age was upon us.
It
was Kodak that again got the lead on the marketplace by getting the first
digital camera out on the market in 1990 when they developed the Kodak DCS 100. As with all technology, early digital cameras
were large (by today’s standards) and much more expensive than we are used to
now.
Innovation
in the field of photography has continued to march almost as fast as people
could keep up. When digital cameras were
offered that gave us a port to be able to download them to our computers, the
internet explosion of imagery was fueled.
Further
development coming virtually every year since 1990 included the rapid and
phenomenal expansion of memory in digital cameras along with the concept of swappable
storage drives. This changed the way
people took pictures because now the number of pictures someone could take was
virtually limitless. The expansion of
memory also gave developers the ability to add video capture to the same
devices as were used for photography so that virtually anyone could become a
cameraman with that tiny camera that could by this time fit in their shirt
pocket. Much of the fun of internet
sites like YouTube can be attributed to the ability of the average citizen to
take video anywhere, anytime and at no cost to them.
The
photography and video industry has had to do a lot of adjusting to learn how to
service this market that was changing at speeds unimaginable by George Eastman
a century before. The affordable
availability of quality color printers that enabled people to print their
photographs at home was a boon to the amateur camera buff but a blow to the
photography industry.
But
to their credit, the industry has kept up.
But we can be sure that the developments are just getting underway. Who knows what new technical wizardry is
ahead for the photography world. It is
sure to be a fun ride, no matter what the future holds.
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