Photography is the process, activity and art to create still images by recording the radiation in a radiation sensitive medium such as photographic film or electronic image sensors. Photo used primarily in the ultraviolet radiation, visible and near infrared spectrum. [1] A common effects in the light term is used instead of radiation. The light reflected or emitted by objects form a real image on a light-sensitive area (film or plate) or a pixel sensor array FPA through a hole or a lens in a device known as a camera for a while exposure. The result in the film or plate is a latent image, then became a visual image (negative or diapositive). A paper based image known as print. The result in the FPA pixel array sensor is an electrical charge in each pixel that is processed electronically and stored in a computer file (bitmap)-image display or further processing. Photography has many applications for business, science, manufacturing (fiFotolitografía), art, and recreation.
Lens and mounting of a large format camera.
A historic camera: the Contax S of 1949 – the first pentaprism SLR.
Nikon F of 1959 – the first set of 35-mm camera film.
Minox B for production of the most stylish camera “honeycomb” selenium light meter
A portable folding reflector positioned to “bounce” the sun in a model
As can be ascertained, was Sir John Herschel at a conference of the Royal Society of London, March 14, 1839 that made the word “photography” known to the world. But in an article published on 25 February of that year in a German newspaper called Vossische Zeitung, Johann von Maedler, an astronomer in Berlin, used the picture and word. The word photography is based on the Greek φῶς (photos) “light” and γραφή (graphe) “representation by means of lines” or “drawing”, which means “drawing with light.”
