August 11: On August 11, 1877, the Daily Alta newspaper announced a project by
Eadward Muybridge and
Leland Stanford to produce sequences of photographs of a running
horse with 12
stereoscopic cameras. Muybridge had much experience with stereo photography and had already made
instantaneous pictures of Stanford's horse Occident running at full speed. He eventually managed to shoot the proposed sequences of running horses in June 1878, with stereoscopic cameras. The published result and animated versions for his
zoopraxiscope were not stereoscopic, but in 1898 Muybridge claimed that he had (privately) viewed the pictures in two synchronized
zoetropes with Wheatstone's reflecting stereoscope as a "very satisfactory reproduction of an apparently solid miniature horse trotting, and of another galloping".[1]
August 30:
Charles-Émile Reynaud patented the
praxinoscope, an animation device that improved on the
zoetrope.[2][3] Like the zoetrope, the praxinoscope used a strip of pictures placed around the inner surface of a spinning
cylinder. The praxinoscope improved on the zoetrope by replacing its narrow viewing slits with an inner circle of
mirrors that intermittently reflected the images.[4][5] The praxinoscope allowed a much clearer view of the moving image compared to the zoetrope, since the zoetrope's images were actually mostly obscured by the spaces in between its slits.[6] Reynaud mentioned the possibility of projecting the images in his 1877 patent, but did not complete his praxinoscope projection device until 1880.[7][8]
Births
February
February 13:
Sidney Smith, American cartoonist (created an animated
film series adapting his own comic strip Old Doc Yak, credited as the first animated series with a recurring character; created the popular comic strip The Gumps, which was adapted into a film series combining live-action and animation), (d.
1935).[9][10][11][12][13]
^Cutter, Susan L.; Harrington, J.W. Jr. (31 March 2004). Brunn, Stanley D. (ed.). Geography and technology. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers. p. 274.
ISBN978-1402018718.
^Chandramouli, Magesh (2021). 3D Modeling & Animation: A Primer. CRC Press. p. 181.
ISBN9781498764926.
August 11: On August 11, 1877, the Daily Alta newspaper announced a project by
Eadward Muybridge and
Leland Stanford to produce sequences of photographs of a running
horse with 12
stereoscopic cameras. Muybridge had much experience with stereo photography and had already made
instantaneous pictures of Stanford's horse Occident running at full speed. He eventually managed to shoot the proposed sequences of running horses in June 1878, with stereoscopic cameras. The published result and animated versions for his
zoopraxiscope were not stereoscopic, but in 1898 Muybridge claimed that he had (privately) viewed the pictures in two synchronized
zoetropes with Wheatstone's reflecting stereoscope as a "very satisfactory reproduction of an apparently solid miniature horse trotting, and of another galloping".[1]
August 30:
Charles-Émile Reynaud patented the
praxinoscope, an animation device that improved on the
zoetrope.[2][3] Like the zoetrope, the praxinoscope used a strip of pictures placed around the inner surface of a spinning
cylinder. The praxinoscope improved on the zoetrope by replacing its narrow viewing slits with an inner circle of
mirrors that intermittently reflected the images.[4][5] The praxinoscope allowed a much clearer view of the moving image compared to the zoetrope, since the zoetrope's images were actually mostly obscured by the spaces in between its slits.[6] Reynaud mentioned the possibility of projecting the images in his 1877 patent, but did not complete his praxinoscope projection device until 1880.[7][8]
Births
February
February 13:
Sidney Smith, American cartoonist (created an animated
film series adapting his own comic strip Old Doc Yak, credited as the first animated series with a recurring character; created the popular comic strip The Gumps, which was adapted into a film series combining live-action and animation), (d.
1935).[9][10][11][12][13]
^Cutter, Susan L.; Harrington, J.W. Jr. (31 March 2004). Brunn, Stanley D. (ed.). Geography and technology. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers. p. 274.
ISBN978-1402018718.
^Chandramouli, Magesh (2021). 3D Modeling & Animation: A Primer. CRC Press. p. 181.
ISBN9781498764926.