By: Emma Wolf
1727: Johann H. Schulze, a German physicist, discovers that silver salts turn dark when exposed to light.
1827: The first still photograph was taken. x.html x.html
1832: Earliest animation. y-of-film-and-video-production y-of-film-and-video-production
1839: Henry Fox Talbot makes an important advancement in photograph production with the introduction of negatives on paper - as opposed to glass. x.html x.html
1846: Important in the development of motion pictures was the invention of intermittent mechanisms. x.html#top x.html#top
1878 British photographer Eadweard Muybridge takes the first successful photographs of motion, showing how people and animals move.
1882: Etienne Marey in France develops a camera, shaped like a gun, that can take twelve pictures per second.
1889: Edison travels to Paris and views Marey's camera which uses flexible film. Dickson then acquires some Eastman Kodak film stock and begins work on a new type. ml ml
1891: Thomas Edison invented the first camera to ever record. y-of-film-and-video-production y-of-film-and-video-production
1900: First video was made with sound. y-of-film-and-video-production y-of-film-and-video-production
1895: In March of 1895, Robert W. Paul and his partner Birt Acres had a functional camera which was based partly on Marey's 1888 camera. tml tml Birt Acres Robert W. Paul
1903: Edwin S. Porter helps to shift film production toward story telling with films such as The Life of an American Fireman and The Great Train Robbery.
1905: First film with color is produced. y-of-film-and-video-production y-of-film-and-video-production
1951: The first video tape recorder captured live images from TV cameras. s/blvideo.htm s/blvideo.htm
1956: The first videotape recorder was sold for $50,000 by Ampex. s/blvideo.htm s/blvideo.htm
1960: First computer animations. y-of-film-and-video-production y-of-film-and-video-production
1971: The first videocassette recorder (VCR) was sold by Sony in s/blvideo.htm s/blvideo.htm
1984: Laser film was a videodisc format developed by McDonnell-Douglas.
1987: 1987 Half of U.S. homes receive cable television.
2000: Corporate video production had become a worldwide phenomenon. corporate-video-production-part html corporate-video-production-part html