DATON MCBRIDE 2 ND PERIOD. Belgian inventor, Joseph Plateau invented the Fantascope also called phenakistiscope or “spindle viewer”, a device that simulated.

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Presentation transcript:

DATON MCBRIDE 2 ND PERIOD

Belgian inventor, Joseph Plateau invented the Fantascope also called phenakistiscope or “spindle viewer”, a device that simulated motion. history

John Wesley Hyatt developed celluloid. It was patented in 1870 and trademarked in 1873, then later used as the base for photographic film.

Edward Muybridge successfully captured a galloping horse, proving that all four of the horses feet were off the ground at the same time. He did this by setting up many cameras along the horses path. He published this work in 1882 and called it “horse in motion”.

French inventor and physiologist Etienne – Jules Mary developed the “photographic gun,” as it was often referred to, which could take multiple photographs per second. The term shooting film was most likely derived from Marey’s invintion.

William Dickson filmed Mokeyshines No.1, the first motion picture ever produced on photographic film in the United States.

 Earliest video format  Never widely adopted, and was intended for practical uses only  used for basic video production abilities such as recording video and playing it back  developed by Cairns and Morrison itd  video-production/ video-production/

 First commercially viable broadcast video format  Broadcast requirement was at least a 5mhz band with  Until this was invented, non-live television broadcasting was too exspensive, but was much easier to record and broadcast  developed by Ampex  video-production/ video-production/

 First portable video recording device  Was used a lot in industry and education  Developed by Sony  video-production/ video-production/

 First time video was stored on a disc  The prototype was limited to ten minutes. Per side, so it took six years until it was finally released with more storage time  Developed by RCA  video-production/ video-production/

 Could store a few hours of storage and was utilized for movies after they were not in theaters  They were also popular for home videos and recording television shows  Developed by RCA  history-of-video-production/ history-of-video-production/

 Use of Cathode Ray to produce Television images  history-of-video-production history-of-video-production

 First Television Broadcast Available in London history-of-video-productionhttp:// history-of-video-production

 “ Howdy Doody” First Childrens Hour-Long Show  history-of-video-production history-of-video-production

 The TV show “I Love Lucy” aired  history-of-video-production history-of-video-production

 CBS Broadcast First Color Program  history-of-video-production history-of-video-production

 Brothers Auguste and Louis Lumiere patent the Cinematographe, a triple threat motion picture camera, projector, and developer  gy/digital/visual-effects/a-brief-history-of- the-movie-camera#slide-2 gy/digital/visual-effects/a-brief-history-of- the-movie-camera#slide-2

 Bell and Howell introduces the first all metal movie camera.  gy/digital/visual-effects/a-brief-history-of- the-movie-camera#slide-3 gy/digital/visual-effects/a-brief-history-of- the-movie-camera#slide-3

 Philo Farnswoth’s video camera tube converts images into electrical signals.  gy/digital/visual-effects/a-brief-history-of- the-movie-camera#slide-4 gy/digital/visual-effects/a-brief-history-of- the-movie-camera#slide-4

 Eastman Kodak’s new 8-mm film upstages 16- mm and becomes the standard for home movies.  gy/digital/visual-effects/a-brief-history-of- the-movie-camera#slide-5 gy/digital/visual-effects/a-brief-history-of- the-movie-camera#slide-5