1880 –
Eadweard Muybridge holds a public demonstration of his
Zoopraxiscope, a
magic lantern provided with a rotating disc with artist's renderings of Muybridge's chronophotographic sequences. It was used as a demonstration device by Muybridge in his illustrated lecture (the original preserved in the Museum of
Kingston upon Thames in England).
January 1, 1881 – American inventor George Eastman founds the
Eastman Dry Plate Company, eventually known as Kodak.[1]
1882 – American inventor George Eastman begins experimenting with new types of
photographic film, with his employee,
William Walker.
1882 – French physiologist
Étienne-Jules Marey invents the chronophotographic gun, the camera shaped like a rifle that photographs twelve successive images each second.
1880 –
Eadweard Muybridge holds a public demonstration of his
Zoopraxiscope, a
magic lantern provided with a rotating disc with artist's renderings of Muybridge's chronophotographic sequences. It was used as a demonstration device by Muybridge in his illustrated lecture (the original preserved in the Museum of
Kingston upon Thames in England).
January 1, 1881 – American inventor George Eastman founds the
Eastman Dry Plate Company, eventually known as Kodak.[1]
1882 – American inventor George Eastman begins experimenting with new types of
photographic film, with his employee,
William Walker.
1882 – French physiologist
Étienne-Jules Marey invents the chronophotographic gun, the camera shaped like a rifle that photographs twelve successive images each second.