Welcome back to our blog series exploring the family tree of
the IP camera. Our first entry focused on Eadweard Muybrhttp://kintronicsvirginia.blogspot.com/2012/10/before-video-camera-first-steps.htmlidge who based his zoopraxisope on
the knowledge that individual still frames, when delivered at more than 14
frames per second, trick the mind into thinking it is seeing motion.
Thomas Edison came
along and saw inefficiencies in the zoopraxiscope and thought he could improve
on it. His kinetoscope, the subject of our second series, used multiple cameras in capturing the images rather
than the zoopraxiscope’s one, and it also used actual film as media.
Now we will look at a branch that sprouted ………in France…….…. with the Lumiere
Brothers, Auguste and Louis.
Ironically, or shall we say, appropriately,
Lumiere means light.
Their father, Antoine, was a portrait artist who,sensing a promising future for photography, started a
business manufacturing photographic equipment. Both brothers had technological aptitude, especially Louis. While still a student, he developed the dry plate process, a techniqueused in photograph developing. Upon graduation from college, they both joined their father in the business; Auguste as a manager, and
Louis, using the knowledge gained in pursuing his degree in physics.
The company had been devoting itself to still photography equipment, but all that changed in 1894 when Antoine was invited to a
demonstration of Edison’s Kinetoscope in Lyons. He came back impressed with the
technology but intent on improving it.
First, there was the size of the device. At four feet high
and over two feet wide, its bulk forced The Edison Company to confine most of its
exhibitions to the Black Maria Studio at
Edison Labs in New Jersey.
And the peephole mechanism - with one person viewing at a time - limited the size of the audience.
After listening to
their father’s ideas, Louis immediately set to work on a smaller device,
one that would bring simultaneous
viewing to a gathered audience.He came up with the
Cinematographe. Weighing only 11 lbs, it was no bigger than the handheld
cameras of the era so it was easy to transport and set up. Not only that, but
it was a camera, printer, and projector all in one.
Louis had also found fault with the Edison's design of pulleys and sprockets to keep the loop of film in continuous movement. Instead he devised a
system of intermittent movement which he described in the preamble to his patent application as:
The basic property of
this appliance’s mechanism is to act intermittently on a regularly perforated
strip of film to transmit successive displacements separated by stationary
periods during which photographic images are either exposed or viewed.
To grasp this more easily think of the sewing machine which
also relies on intermittent movement. The feed mechanism advances the material,
then pauses it so that stitching can be applied, before further advancing, more stitching and so on.
Lumiere was also inspired
by fellow Frenchman Emile Reynaud and
his theatre Optique which projected successive
frames on a screen. He incorporated it for the first Lumiere screening, held at
an industrial meeting in Paris on March 22, 1895. The film, titled Les Sortie
des Oevriers des L’usine Lumiere, showed workers leaving the Lumiere factory.
Satisfied with the favorable reaction to his premiere, Lumiere applied for an English
patent on April 18, 1895. With intellectual ownership rights assured, the Lumiere Brothers held more private
screenings, and then amidst a buzz of excitement, had their first public
screening in April in Paris in December of 1896
The program consisted of ten short films whose total viewing time was not quite 20 minutes.
Seeing that people were eager to experience moving pictures
for themselves, the Lumieres opened four theaters of their own, one each in
Paris, London, Brussels, and New York City.
By 1896, their catalog of titles numbered 358 and would grow to 1,000 in 1898 and 2,113 in 1903. At the 1900 Paris Exhibition, they held an outdoor showing on a 99 x 79 foot screen.Yet despite their growing fame, the Lumiere Company retired from the moving picture business and returned to manufacturing.
Why the departure from the mushrooming craze of" the movies”? It was Louis belief that people would become bored with things they could encounter in life just by going outside for a walk. He is quoted as saying “ The cinema is an invention without a future,”
Instead the Lumiere Brothers returned their efforts to still photography work and in 1907, designed the Autochrome plate which was a giant step in the direction of practical processing of color photographs.
Legend has it that one of their films, showing the
emergence of a train from a tunnel, sent the audience screaming out of the
auditorium, convinced that the locomotive would be bursting through the screen.
By 1896, their catalog of titles numbered 358 and would grow to 1,000 in 1898 and 2,113 in 1903. At the 1900 Paris Exhibition, they held an outdoor showing on a 99 x 79 foot screen.Yet despite their growing fame, the Lumiere Company retired from the moving picture business and returned to manufacturing.
Why the departure from the mushrooming craze of" the movies”? It was Louis belief that people would become bored with things they could encounter in life just by going outside for a walk. He is quoted as saying “ The cinema is an invention without a future,”
Instead the Lumiere Brothers returned their efforts to still photography work and in 1907, designed the Autochrome plate which was a giant step in the direction of practical processing of color photographs.
Louis Lumiere may have been a genius when it came to technology, but he had a long way to go as a cultural visionary.
Today he'd be amazed to see the role moving frames would play in developing video technology for the purposes of surveillance and safety. And even though IP cameras make no use of film, they do owe the Lumiere Brothers a word of thanks.
Today he'd be amazed to see the role moving frames would play in developing video technology for the purposes of surveillance and safety. And even though IP cameras make no use of film, they do owe the Lumiere Brothers a word of thanks.
If you want information about IP cameras call Kintronics at
800-431-1658 or visit us at Kintronics.com. For specifics, fill out a request info form and one of our
engineers will get back to you.