No he doesn't because in all his pictures he didn't have glasses and I don't think glasses where invented back in those early days.
This site doesn't provide pictures and in the 1600's there were no cameras. A camera won't be invented for another 200 plus years.
John Logie Baird transmitted the first pictures over radio waves and proved it could be done. he demonstarted it on Jan 27th 1926 and broadcast for the BBC on Sept 30th 1929, the first public broadcast of television. TV was invented to bring moving pictures into the home, instead of having to go out to the cinema. Many people said it would never catch on. Philo Taylor Farnsworth invented the first fully modern electronic television system. He was the first inventor to transmit a television image of a dollar sign (comprised of 60 horizontal lines.) Farnsworth developed the dissector tube, the basis of all current electronic televisions. This was an improvement on mechanical televisions.
The camera wasn't invented yet when she was little.
If you mean actual pictures I am sorry but the camera wasn't invented until 1830 so that is not possible. Usually your history book will show a picture of what we think they may have worn, but that is even a guess so we can only go by the artifacts of the time.
Celluloid.
because you are silly:))
Thomas Edison toke picture and made them into a slide show fast then it turns into moving pictures.
William Morris invented the cinema but it was originally called the moving pictures in victorian times.
Because he was fed up of watching the same picture over and over
put together pictures and makes it start moving and makes movies
When moving pictures first came out, people loved them. The moving pictures was a big step for the movie industry.
Moving Pictures - band - ended in 1987.
Moving Pictures - band - was created in 1978.
Independent Moving Pictures was created in 1909.
Moving Pictures - album - was created in 1980-10.
In 1893, Thomas Edison invented the kinetoscope, which was a device for viewing moving pictures. It was an early form of motion pictures where individual frames were viewed through a peephole.