Related Video Collections
All Comments
Explain the principles of the first kodak camera? I am doing a photography assignment on the history of photography and i have answered all questions except "Explain the principles of the first kodak camera."
I have done heaps of looking on the internet but can't find much that helps me answer/do the question. Help? | | The original slogan of the Kodak camera was "You take the picture, we do the rest." The principle was that Kodak sold you a camera, called the Brownie Box Camera, which was pre-loaded with film. It was a very simple camera, with very few controls, so pretty much anyone could use it. If it wasn't the first 'snapshot' camera, it was close to the first one. Once someone had taken all of the pictures on the roll, they didn't rewind the film and open the camera to remove the film, they sent the entire camera back to Kodak. Kodak would remove the film, process the negatives, make the prints, load new film in to the camera, and send it back to you. | What was the first kodak camera? i need a picture? i need a picture of the first kodak camera but google shows all these different ones and its confusing. | This 1888 model.
www.visibledarkness.com/depressio… | How much was the first Kodak camera? Please help me.
some websites say it was 24.99 and others say it was 9.99 | I would consider Kodak EasyShare C182 Digital Camera (Blue)
12-megapixel resolution
3x optical zoom
Smart Capture feature automatically identifies the scene and adjusts camera settings
3-inch LCD screen
Capture images to SD/SDHC memory cards (not included)
www.amazon.com/Kodak-EasyShare-C1…
rover.ebay.com/rover/1/711-53200-… | How did the first Kodak Camera [made by George Eastman] function/work? How did it work? | n 1874, Eastman became intrigued with photography, but found the process awkward. It required coating a glass plate with a liquid emulsion, which had to be quickly used before it dried. After three years of experimentation with British gelatin emulsions, Eastman developed a dry photographic plate, and patented it in both England and the US. In 1880 he began a photographic business.
In 1884, Eastman patented a photographic medium that replaced fragile glass plates with a photo-emulsion coated on paper rolls. The invention of roll film greatly sped up the process of recording multiple images
Eastman then received a patent in 1888 for a camera designed to use roll film. He coined the marketing phrase, "You press the button, we do the rest."[3] The phrase entered the public consciousness. It was even incorporated into a Gilbert & Sullivan operetta (Utopia, Limited).
The camera owner could send in the camera with a processing fee of $10. The company would develop the film, print 100 pictures, and also send along a new roll of 100-exposures film. | What year was the first Kodak camera made in? I just need the year thats all
btw thanks for trying | | 1888 | ACTUAL SIZE OF FIRST KODAK CAMERA? what was the actual size of the first kodak camera that was built by George Eastman?
I HAVE TO MAKE AN EXACT REPLICA FOR SCHOOL!
FML. | www.shutterbug.com/equipmentrevie… 1) 1888 Kodak.
3¼x3¼x6½ inches.
It took a while to track down the actual measurements. | When was the kodak camera first invented? what year was it invented and who invented it? | | George Eastman invented the Kodak camera in 1888. | I just wrote an essay about how the first Kodak camera impacted people, Can you read the first body paragraph? I am a Gr.10 student and this essay is for social studies. Please give your opinion and how it could be improved.
Kodak’s many benefits turned photography from a formidable technique for professionals to a delightful hobby for all. First, the Kodak camera was “as convenient as the pencil”. All the user had to do was: “1. Point the camera. 2. Press the button. 3. Turn the key [to advance exposed or used film]. 4. Pull the cord [to open the shutter].” After the entire roll was exposed, the owner simply mailed the camera along with ten dollars to the Eastman Kodak company, where the pictures would be developed and the camera mailed back reloaded with a new roll of film, ready for more snapping. On the other hand, traditional photography required the photographer, a trained professional, to prepare his or her plates by soaking the fragile glass plates (or “film”) with a carefully mixed cocktail of chemicals. Then the photographer raced to the camera, exposed the plate, and developed the photo all before the plate dried. The Kodak was also portable. The photographer only had to bring the compact and lightweight Kodak. On the contrary, traditional photography required a camera size of a microwave, several glass plates, a plate holder, a portable darkroom (a tent), a tripod, a water jug, a thick piece of black cloth, and bottles of chemicals that could permeate clothing. Most importantly, the Kodak was affordable. Especially in 1900, Eastman introduced the Brownie camera. It cost a dollar. Adversely, traditional photography equipment cost $120 (today’s rough equivalent: $8000). Before the Kodak, only the wealthy and the skilled could pursue photography. Four years after the Kodak was introduced, ninety-thousand people took up photography and snapped more than nine million pictures.
;] | You have a lot of good information. You are a good writer. But.....
You have had no training on how to compose an essay. This is not your fault. Your teachers do not know either.
All essays makes a statement and the statement is a point supported by a proof with a comment on how our understanding has grown or changed based upon this research.
A standard essay contains three parts
Opening Body Closing
Each part of an essay is composed of paragraphs.
All paragraphs are composed of three elements.
Point Proof Comment.
The first paragraph is called a "thesis". A thesis (or hypothesis) is an assertion of a truth: All red balls are red. This asserts a truth. A thesis is also a GUESS based upon observations.
A thesis is an opening statement which serves as the hook from which one can hang the proofs. As you go along you comment on whether the assertion is holding up. In the final paragraph you may have changed your opinion. That is fine. That is research. An essay should cover intellectual ground, that is, move your understanding from one point to another or deepen it. You can conclude an essay with the statement "The opening thesis has not withstood the analysis and is false." That is fine. You do not have to conclude that but I make this point that a thesis is just a guess although one based upon evidence and observation.
A small essay may look like this:
The opening paragraph asserts a truth, proves that the assertion is valid by pointing to evidence, and then makes a comment on why the point is of interest. The comment turns around and looks at the truth and explains where the truth points us.
Point: All red balls are red.
Proof: Red balls collected from all parts of the globe and studied by experts in color have concluded that all red balls are red.
Comment: Accordingly funding for further study has been denied based upon the matter being classified as worthy of notice only.
The body of the essay may make three points that support the opening point. The three points are dealt with separately in three paragraphs in accordance with the format.
Support Point 1. The work of Sampson and Goliath tells us that all balls gathered in Asia were determined to be of a red color.
Supporting proof 1. The records of Sampson and Goliath were preserved in a mudslide and are considered to be accurate recounts.
Comment. This study is probative of the premise that all red balls are red since all red balls in Asia are red.
Support Point 2. The work of Sodom and Ghemorra done a century later expanded the study in Europe.
Proof of point 2. Their work was conducted under the scrutiny of J who was credited with diligence and precision as a reputation.
Comment. The Asia study is confirmed by the European Study.
Support Point 3. This matter was ordered closed by the Emperor after riots broke out over fraudulent claims of some red balls as being brown. The Emperor was unsuccessful in keeping the matter closed. Proof 3. The excavations of Utrichia discovered wall paintings. At that time paint specialist had devised new techniques for analyzing pigment. It was found that brown changed into red over time.
Comment. The purity of the Asian study and the European study was now open to question.
The final paragraph has the same format but it synthesizes the three points in the body as its point. It reviews the proofs by linking them together. Then it makes a comment.
Final Point: While all red balls are red, not all balls are red and this alters the purity of findings on red balls. The third point in this essay examined ancient wall paintings and the proof therein tells us that some pigment change color over time.
The comment of the final paragraph should contrast the opening point and the final point.
Final comment. It may be the case that not all red balls are red all of the time. Funding for new studies on this matter will be give preference to those who demonstrate valid suspicions regarding the true color of other balls. We will not consider squares or triangles at this time.
The final comment and the opening premise should cover some intellectual distance. In other words the opening premise should evolve into the closing comment or stand in opposition to it. Research means to learn about something. You are going to examine the nature of a matter by showing how it develops or you are going to examine the nature of a matter by contrasting it to what it is not.
Citation is the name of the source, the author, and an identification of where in the work your information can be found. Primarily the goal is to keep yourself clean of claiming credit for the work of others as well as proving that your research has been intelligent. Example: Asian Red Balls and Their Predecessors, by Sampson and Goliath, Pompeii Collection, facsimile release 1990 by Excavations International, files 112 to 117.
Research is incredibly simple. Just remember POINT PROOF COMMENT over and over and o | Where was the shutter release button no the first kodak camera??? plz help.? and what was the function of the peep hole at the top and the barrel shutter??\
what were the steps to take a pic with the no.1 kodak camera?
thnx. | | on top |
|