The very first photos in the history guys ...
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The very first photo in the world was made in 1826 by Joseph Nicéphore Niépce . The photo is called "View from the window".
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The first color photograph was taken by the mathematical physicist, James Clerk Maxwell.
The piece above is considered the first durable color photograph and was envied by Maxwell at a lecture in 1861.
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The first photograph of a human appeared above in a snapshot captured by Louis Daguerre. The exposure lasted
around seven minutes and was aimed at capturing the Boulevard du Temple, a thoroughfare in Paris, France.
Due to the long exposure time, many individuals who walked the street where not in place long enough to make an
impression. However, in the lower left of the photograph we can see a man standing and getting his shoe’s polished.
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The first photograph from space was taken by the V-2 #13 rocket, which was launched in October, 24th of 1946.
The photo depicts the Earth in black-and-white from an altitude of 65 miles. The camera that captured the shot was
a 35mm motion picture camera that snapped a frame every second and a half as the rocket climbed straight up
into the atmosphere.
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The first aerial photograph was carried out by the French inventor Gaspard Tournachon (Nadar) in 1858.
He photographed Paris from a balloon.
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The very first underwater photo was made by William Thompson in 1856.
During shooting, the camera was installed on the seabed near Weymont (UK).
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Before ‘selfies’ were all the rage, Robert Cornelius set up a camera and took the world’s first self-portrait in the
back of a business on Chestnut Street in Center City, Philadelphia. Cornelius sat in front of the lens for a little
over a minute, before leaving the seat and covering the lens. The now iconic photograph was captured 178+ years ago in 1839.