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Invention of the camera
The Camera is a box like device for holding a film or plate sensative to light, having an aperture controlled by a shutter that, when opened, admits light enabling an object to be focused, usually by means of a lense, on the film or plate, thereby producing a photographic image. -
Jens Poul Andersen
This is a 35mm camera built in Denmark by Jens Poul Andersen. it has two plano convex lense elements. fixed apperture settings are f/5, f/8, f/10, and f/15. It only has one shutter speed of 1/100 sec. It is made of mahogany wood and it only holds 20 pictures on 35mm film. The camera is similar to a brick in size. -
Werke Simons & Co.
This camera was made in 1923 it has a dark brown wooden body with brass trim it 30x40mm exposures. iris diaphram to f22 shutter 1/300. -
Contax - 1932
Top rangefinder camera, including a black body. It had the longest rangefinder base ever. shutter speed was 1/1000 second. the camera had detactable lenses. by 1934 it had 12 lenses. -
MZ-S
It had a Black Crinkle finish. flash shutter is 1/6000 top speed. You can manually adjust exposure. The flash is bult in. it has self timer, single frame shooting, multi-frame shooting and multiple exposure. -
Nikon D80
automatic focus, interchangable lenses 10.2 megapixels, it has a wider flash range and a longer battery life. -
Citations
Bertacchi, Marssimo. "List of Early 35mm Cameras, from 1914 to 1932 Pag.1." List of Early 35mm Cameras, from 1914 to 1932 Pag.1. N.p., 9 Aug. 2006. Web. 25 Sept. 2012. http://corsopolaris.net/supercameras/early/early_135.html. Collins English Dictionary. "Camera Obscura." Dictionary.com. Dictionary.com, 2009. Web. 25 Sept. 2012. <http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/camera obscura?s=t>. Prototypes 2. (n.d.). Prototypes 2. Retrieved September 25, 2012, from http://www.aohc.it/proto2e.htm -
Citations Continued..
Barchesi, E. (2000, November 20). Cameras. Cameras. Retrieved September 25, 2012, from http://www.aohc.it/photokina2000_1e.htm Hilderbrand, R. (2001, March 8). Prototypes 2. Prototypes 2. Retrieved September 25, 2012, from http://www.aohc.it/proto2e.htm Pwkits. (2008, July 16). Pwkits.org. Nikon for Professional Digital Camera. Retrieved from http://www.pwkits.org/nikon-for-professional-digital-camera.html