The History of the Camera
By thorgal on Feb 14, 2008 | In Playtime
In our series 'Photography for Beginners' we will look at the best way to choose a camera. But first I would like to explain quickly the basic principle of how a camera works.
In ancient times, Greek and Chinese philosophers discovered a curious optical effect, and it worked like this:
Inside a completely dark room, a tiny hole is created in one wall. Through the hole light is focused, and the outside scene is projected (upside down) on the opposite wall.
The effect came to be known as the "camera obscura" which is Latin for "dark room". This was the first camera. The hole acted like a lens, focusing and projecting light onto the wall of the dark chamber.
In the 17th century, the modern camera came one step closer when Isaac Newton and Christian Huygens perfected the understanding of optics and the process of making high quality glass lenses.
Soon there were small, portable camera obscuras, but an important piece was missing..
Then in 1827 Joseph Nicéphore Niépce added the final touch. He added *film* to create the first successful photograph, and the modern camera was born:
A glass lens, a dark box, and film.
New cameras are very easy to use, just point and shoot. The camera's built-in computer handles focus and exposure so you don't have to.
It's comforting to know that even the latest digital cameras work the same way as their ancestors:
Light passes through the lens, into the camera, and exposes the film. And guess what? The end result is still a photograph.
So what has changed? The most recent revolution in photography is the invention of digital film.
Replacing old-fashioned plastic film, digital cameras capture the images with an electronic sensor called a CCD. Photographs are stored on reusable computer memory devices.
The result is that modern photography is cheaper (and more environmentally friendly) than it has ever been before.
A digital camera is still composed of a lens, a dark box, and film.
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