This is the first camara ever made (not the one on the left)! This wooden sliding-box camera was made in Paris in September 1839 by Alphonse Giroux and was just recently discovered after having spent decades in private ownership in northern Germany.
The first image taken by a modern camera with light-sensitive salts on a glass plate was around 1834 by a Frenchman named Louis Daguerre. He patented the process and revealed it to the world in 1839. It was called a Daguerreotype. But it was back in the 11th century that the camera obscura was first invented as a light box for artists to do sketches. That was actually where the modern camera that we are so familiar with today got it's shortened name. So if you consider the camera obscura as the real fist camera then the images that it most likely "captured" were landscapes and portraits. Long before the first public announcements of photographic processes in 1839, Joseph Nicéphore Niépce, a scientifically-minded gentleman living on his country estate near Chalon-sur-Saône, France, began experimenting with Photography. Fascinated with the craze for the newly-invented art of lithography which swept over France in 1813, he began his initial experiments by 1816. Unable to draw well, Niépce first placed engravings, made transparent, onto engraving stones or glass plates coated with a light-sensitive varnish of his own composition. These experiments, together with his application of the then-popular optical instrument, the camera obscura, would eventually lead him to the invention of the new medium. In 1824 Niépce met with some degree of success in copying engravings, but it would be two years later before he had success utilizing pewter plates as the support medium for the process. By the summer of that year, 1826, Niépce was ready. In the window of his upper-story workroom at his Saint-Loup-de-Varennes country house, Le Gras, he set up a camera obscura, placed within it a polished pewter plate coated with bitumen of Judea (an asphalt derivative of petroleum), and uncapped the lens. After at least a day-long exposure of eight hours, the plate was removed and the latent image of the view from the window was rendered visible by washing it with a mixture of oil of lavender and white petroleum which dissolved away the parts of the bitumen which had not been hardened by light. The result was the permanent direct positive picture you see here -- a one-of-a-kind photograph on pewter. It renders a view of the outbuildings, courtyard, trees and landscape as seen from that upstairs window. === See Web Links: For more information on this story and actual pictures of the first photograph ever taken
The first known chemical photograph was a view of buildings from a window at a place called Le Gras, in France. The picture was made by Joseph Nicéphore Niépce in 1826 (some sources say 1827), using a camera obscura to make an eight hour exposure on a polished pewter plate sensitized with bitumen. You can see the photograph at the Related Link below. It's not much to look at because of the long exposure. The buildings are lit from both sides.
The first picture taken with a camera was made in 1827 by the
Frenchman Nicephore Niepce. The picture is a view from his window at Le Gras. The picture is now at the Gernsheim Collection, Humanities Research Center, University of Texas at Austin
anywhere
An air photo is an aerial photograph - a photograph taken from the air.
It is an unposed photo often taken without the subject's permission.
January 10, 1911 is the first photo from an airplane taken in the US.It was in San Diego.I'm not sure if that is in the world though.
French inventor Joseph Nicéphore Niépce took the first permanent photo in 1826. Daguerre continued his work, using the notes Niépce left and performing the process. In 1839 he creates the first photograph with people (an achievement considering the long time that was required for exposure).
1745
What is the worlds first ever used digital camera. What kind was it and what company manufactured it. And what was the first ever picture taken with this camera.
View from the Window at Le Gras
No everyone will have taken a panorama photo.
The first photo with people in it was taken in 1838 by Louis Daguerre. (loo-ee duh-GAIR) But the people in this photo are unknown - just people walking down a street in France.
You can have your photo taken by a street photographer. Or you can have photos taken in Kandahar.
Christian's photo
anywhere
I'm not entirely sure that I understand the question. If your question is "If a photo has Jupiter half in sunlight and half in shadow, will this allow you to calculate where the photo was taken?", then the answer is "Yes, but only if you know the exact TIME when the photo was taken." If the photo was taken by a spacecraft, then we can only calculate the line of position along which the photo was taken. Depending on the quality of the lens and the magnification used, the photo may have been taken from a position close to Jupiter or one farther away.
The photo to be featured on the NRL grandfinal trophy was taken in between 1946 and 1947
The first photo of the moon was taken by John W. Draper in 1839. The moon was the intentional object of the shot, and not merely in the background of a landscape. The photo can be seen in the related link.
The first photo was of the far side of the moon was taken in 1959 by Luna 3, the Soviet space craft. It was first directly observed by Apollo 8 in 1968.