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	<title>Copper Heron Studio &#187; digital</title>
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	<description>Scrapbooking Supplies</description>
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		<title>Mirriwrap Mirror Surface Paper- Silver</title>
		<link>http://copperheronstudio.com/craft-supplies/mirriwrap-mirror-surface-paper-silver-2/</link>
		<comments>http://copperheronstudio.com/craft-supplies/mirriwrap-mirror-surface-paper-silver-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 16 Dec 2011 17:27:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Marianna Monroe</dc:creator>
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<p>Early  cameras  of  the  16th  and  17th  century  were  capable  to  project  images  onto  paper  or  glass  but  the  study  of  capturing,  processing  and  printing  the  images  took  some  more  years.  Up  until  the  17th  century,  scientists  believed  that  light  was  composed  basically  of  the  &#8216;white&#8217;  that  is  sensed  by  the  humane  eye.  It  took  the  exploration  done  by  widely known and esteemed  physicist  Isaac  Newton  to  discover  that  light  is  in truth  composed  of  a  spectrum  of  colors.  While  he  made  a  huge  contribution  to  the  study  of  optics  (that  is  at  the  core  of  camera  advances)  with  this  discovery,  Newton  did  not  in truth  have  anything  to  do  with  camera  development  per  se.</p>
<p>The  early  camera  that  original  became  a  phenomenon  was  a  little  more  than  a  pinhole  camera  and  may  be  traced  back  to  1558.  It  was  called  the  Camera  Obscura.  The  Camera  Obscura  was  seen  as  a  drawing  tool  for  a  clearer  and  realistic  portrayal  of  objects.  It  was  in  the  early  19th  century  that  an  invention  named  the  Camera  Lucida  was  introduced  by  Cambridge  scientist  William  Hyde  Wollaston  that  consisted  of  an  optical  device  that  could  aid  an  artisan  view  a  distant  scene  or  person  or  object  on  a  paper  surface  that  he  or  she  was  using  to  draw.  In  other  words  the  artisan  gets  to  view  a  superimposed  effigy  of  a  subject  on  paper  and  this  effigy  could  be  efficaciously  used  to  undertake  to  draw,  trace  or  paint  it.  Both  the  Camera  Obscura  and  the  Camera  Lucida  provided  an  effigy  that  was  temporary,  which  could  not  be  lastingly  captured  on  to  paper  for  later  reference.</p>
<p>Studies  nonetheless  continued  well  into  the  1800&#8242;s  on  how  to  genuinely  capture  the  effigy  onto  material.  It  was  for the duration of  this  time,  around  1822  that  French  researcher  Joseph  Nicephore  Niepce,  formulated  the  basi  photograph  by  using  paper  that  was  coated  with  a  chemical.  The  effigy  would  not  stay  permanently  on  the  paper  and  would  vanish  after  a  short  while.  Even  so,  in spite of  the  short-lived  nature  of  the  image,  the  conception  of  photography  was  born  with  this  experiment  and  paved  the  way  for  further  study  and  development  in  this  field.</p>
<p>Capturing  images  to  retain  them  longer  and  permanently  became  the  next  big  quest  for  researchers.  Another  Frenchman  Louis-Jacques-Mandé  Daguerre  partnered  with  Joseph  Nicéphore  Niépce  in  1829,  to  create  the  procedure  of  creating  permanent  photographs.  Joseph  Niépce  passed from physical life  in  1833  but  Daguerre  continued  with  the  work  and  succeeded  in  1837  after  some  long  years  of  experimentation.  The  procedure  of  capturing  photographic  images  that  would  not  fade  away,  introduced  by  Daguerre  came  to  be  known  as  the  &#8216;daguerreotype&#8217;.</p>
<p>The  word  &#8216;photography&#8217;  was  coined  by  scientist  Sir  John  F.W.  Herschel  in  1839  and  it  is  in truth  is  derived  from  two  Greek  words  &#8216;photos&#8217;  meaning  light  and  &#8216;graphein&#8217;  meaning  draw.</p>
<p>A  somewhat  more  modern  version  of  the  daguerreotype  called  the  Calotype  routine  that  makes  multiple  copies  possible  using  the  negative  and  positive  method  became  available  very  soon  after.  In  fact,  it  was  for the duration of  the  1840&#8242;s  that  the  use  of  photographic  images  in  advertisements  introductory  started  and  cameras  made  their  mark  on  the  power  of  visual  communication.  It  was  not  much  later,  in  the  1850&#8242;s  that  photographers  basi  started  experimenting  with  underwater  photography  of  seascapes.</p>
<p>Up  until  1850,  the  routine  of  capturing  images  was  cumbersome  requiring  upto  half  an  hour  of  light  exposure.  The  invention  made  in  1851  by  Frederick  Scott  Archer  was  a  benediction  since  the  new  method  termed  the  Collodion  routine  called  for  just  2-3  seconds  of  light  exposure  to  capture  an  image.</p>
<p>Prior  to  1871,  photographers  went  through  a  development  procedure  where  they  had  to  coat  the  plate  with  wet  chemical  each  and  each  time  and  routine  the  effigy  immediately.  With  the  invention  the  gelatin  arid  plate  silver  bromide  procedure  by  Richard  Leach  Maddox,  negatives  did  not  have  to  be  devised  immediately.  This  was  an  necessary  invention  since  up  until  then  the  captured  effigy  had  to  be  processed  instantly.</p>
<p>Kodak  produced  in  1888  by  George  Eastman  has  been  a  modern  day  pioneer  of  sorts  in  cameras  and  photography  for  the  masses.  George  Eastman  and  the  scientists  who  worked  with  him  at  Kodak  developed  the  photographic  film  in  1889  and  made  it  available  in  rolls  for  the  mass  use  of  consumers.  An  primary  milestone  in  our  amusement  and  communication  history  was  the  development  of  transparent  roll  film  by  Eastman.  This  development  led  to  another  key  invention  &#8211;  the  motion  picture  camera  by  Thomas  Edison&#8217;s  in  1891.</p>
<p>&#8211;&gt;Modern  Times</p>
<p>During  the  20th  century  the  pace  of  engineering  development  in  cameras  and  photography  continued  at  an  sped up  pace  much  like  galore  other  key  engineering science  developments.  While  assorted  key  inventions  like  car,  telephone  and  the  gramophone  record  happened  in  the  later  half  of  the  19th  century,  it  is  the  last  100  years  that  saw  major  developmental  work  in  some  areas  of  communications  technology  and  as  well  as  in  other  fields  &#8211;  TV,  aircrafts,  PCs,  digital  technology,  digital  cameras,  mobile  phones,  fax  machines  and  the  internet,  to  name  a  few.</p>
<p>In  the  case  of  the  camera,  the  developments  simplified  the  whole  routine  of  photography,  making  it  accessible  to  one  and  all  at  lowpriced  prices  and  the  camera  industry  denizens  of  our  times  made  it  into  a  mass  phenomenon.  The  primary  mass  use  camera  became  available  at  the  turn  of  the  20th  century  and  may  be  traced  back  to  the  year  1900.  There  are  hundreds  of  models  of  cameras  available  today  both  for  the  novice  as  well  as  the  professional  and  the  camera  is  an  crucial  part  of  any  family&#8217;s  repertoire  of  will have to  have  gadgets.</p>
<p>&#8211;&gt;20th  century  chronology  in  the  history  of  the  camera:</p>
<p>1913:  35  mm  still-camera  created</p>
<p>1927:  The  flash  bulb  introduced  by  General  Electric  Co.  (The  conception  of  camera  flash  existed  much  before  but  was  based  on  the  use  of  a  flash  light  powder  that  was  developed  by  German  researchers)</p>
<p>1935-  1941:  Kodak  starts  marketing  Kodachrome  film  and  subsequently  launches  Kodacolor  negative  film.  Canon  freed  the  Hansa  Canon  in  1936,  the  original  35mm  focal-plane  shutter  camera.</p>
<p>1948:  The  conception  of  the  Polaroid  camera  is  introduced  in  the  market.  American  scientist  Edwin  Land  formulated  the  routine  for  instant  photography.  Later  Polaroid  Corporation  formulated  the  &#8216;instant  color&#8217;  film  around  1963.</p>
<p>1957:  Frenchman  Jaques  Yves  Cousteau  formulated  the  initial  waterproof  35mm  camera  for  underwater  photography  named  the  Calypso  Phot.  The  actual  camera  was  produced  by  the  Belgian  airplane  technical  architect  Jean  de  Wouters  based  on  the  blueprint  and  suggestions  given  to  him  by  Cousteau.</p>
<p>1972:  The  electronic  camera  that  does  not  require  film  was  invented  and  patented  by  Texas  Instruments.  This  is  nevertheless  not  the  same  as  a  digital  camera  even though  you  don&#8217;t  require  film  in  digital  cameras  as  well.  The  launch  of  the  digital  camera  is  still  a good deal of  years  away.</p>
<p>1975:  Kodak&#8217;s  experiments  with  digital  imaging  kicked  off  around  the  mid  seventies  but  it  will  take  another  20  years  before  a  digital  camera  for  the  home  buyer  market  is  launched.</p>
<p>1978  &#8211;  1980:  Asian  players  like  Konica  and  Sony  get started  to  make  their  mark.  The  &#8216;point  and  shoot&#8217;  automatic  focus  camera  is  launched  by  Konica  while  Sony  starts  talking  when it comes to  the  camcorder  and  demonstrates  a  prototype.</p>
<p>1981:  Sony  launches  a  commercially  available  electronic  still  camera.  Similar  to  the  1972  invention  by  Texas  Instruments,  the  Sony  electronic  camera  came  with  a  mini  disc  on  which  images  were  recorded  and  stored.  The  recorded  images  could  be  later  printed  or  viewed  on  a  monitor  using  a  reader  device.</p>
<p>1985:  Digital  processing  engineering  makes  it is  entry.  Digital  imaging  and  processing  is  introduced  by  Pixar.</p>
<p>1986:  The  camera  industry  becomes  even  more  buyer  concentered  and  taps  the  fun  and  travel  connotations  behind  camera  usage,  with  the  launch  of  the  conception  of  the  disposable  single  use  cameras.  Fuji  is  credited  with  the  development  of  this  concept.</p>
<p>Also  in  1986  &#8211;  1987,  Kodak  started  taking  giant  strides  in  digital  development.  Digital  means,  the  photographic  effigy  is  separated  into  tiny  units  of  dots  or  squares  known  as  pixels.  Pixels  are  the  programmable  units  of  an  effigy  that  may  be  processed  by  computers.  Each  effigy  could  be  made  up  of  millions  of  pixels.  The  use  of  pixels  in  digital  technology  allows  storing  huge  volumes  of  pixels  to  deliver  high  definition  print  quality.</p>
<p>1990:  Kodak  introduces  Photo  CD&#8217;s.  It  is  a  system  of  storing  photographic  images  on  CD  and  then  looking at  them  on  a  computer.  With  this  development  the  user-friendly  approach  of  the  camera  industry  started out  to  take  concrete  shape.</p>
<p>1991:  Kodak  introduces  a  digital  camera  purposed  at  masters  and  journalists.  Kodak  is  credited  with  the  invention  of  a  pixel  based  camera  engineering  known  to  us  as  the  digital  camera.  Digital  cameras  don&#8217;t  use  film  similar  to  their  predecessor  electronic  cameras  but  the  storage  method  is  wholly  dissimilar  and  the  final  photograph  is  of  much  higher  resolution.  In  a  digital  camera  photos  are  recorded  and  stored  in  digital  form.  This  digital  data  may  be  transposed  to  a  computer  and  processed  for  printing.  Kodak  and  Canon  are  well  known  digital  camera  makers  and  there  are  also  various  other  key  brands  as  well.</p>
<p>1994:  The  Apple  QuickTake  camera,  a  home  use  digital  camera  is  launched.  This  is  followed  by  the  launch  of  a  clutch  of  home  use  digital  cameras  by  Casio,  Kodak  and  others  in  quick  succession  for the duration of  1995  -&#8217;96.</p>
<p>&#8211;&gt;The  digital  era:</p>
<p>The  development  of  digital  camera  engineering  is  considered  to  be  linked  to  the  development  of  TV  and  Video  technology.  The  principles  of  transmission  and  recording  of  audio-visual  images  using  digital  electrical  impulses  finds  use  in  camera  imaging  as  well.</p>
<p>Through  the  1990&#8242;s  the  developments  continued  in  camera  technology,  the  focus  now  shifting  to  the  field  of  digital  imaging  which  is  where  the  future  lies.  Use-friendly  features  like  software  that  may  download  digital  images  directly  from  camera  onto  home  computers  for  storing  and  sharing  on  the  internet  is  the  new  norm  in  the  market  place.</p>
<p>The  camera,  the  computer,  the  software  industry  and  the  global  web  are  today  irrevocably  interlinked  to  empower  the  user  in  experiencing  the  gains  of  camera  usage  to  full  potential.  The  innovation  that  sparked  a good deal of  an  invention  in  the  camera  industry  found  it is  way  into  the  digital  world  as  well  and  continued  amid  digital  camera  manufacturers.  During  2001,  the  Kodak  and  Microsoft  cooperative relationship  ensured  that  digital  camera  makers  could  use  the  power  of  Picture  Transfer  Protocol  (PTP)  ordinary  through  Windows.  The  digital  photo  experience  is  a  key  visual  driver  in  the  Internet  era.  Many  of  Kodak  digital  camera  models  with  EasyShare  capablenesses  are  compatible  with  Windows  XP.  The  Kodak  EasyShare  software  enables  users  to  transfer  digital  camera  pictures  directly  from  camera  to  their  computers  and  then  print  the  pictures  or  even  email  them.</p>
<p>Manufacturers  in  a  related  industry  like  the  printing  industry  have  adapted  their  merchandise  to  be  in  sync  with  the  images  formulated  by  digital  cameras.  Cell  phone  makers  have  tied  up  with  digital  camera  manufacturers  to  create  new  age  camera  phones  in  recent  years.  These  camera  phones  may  capture  images  and  share  the  images  through  the  cell  phone.</p>
<p>Among  the  21st  century  digital  developments  are  the  progressed  product  offerings  from  digital  cameras  manufacturers  and  these  are  sure  to  occupy  an  indispensable  place  in  the  ensuing  history  of  camera  development.  For  instance,  the  Kodak  Professional  DCS  Pro  SLR/c  is  a  high-end  digital  camera  and  the  Kodak  internetsite  calls  the  DCS  Pro  SLR  models  the  most  feature-rich  digital  cameras  on  the  market.  It  has  an  effigy  sensor  that  may  handle  13.89  million  pixels  and  this  makes  it  the  most eminent  solution  digital  camera  available.  High  solution  determines  the  sharpness  or  level  of  detail  in  photographic  images.  This  is  just  a  glimpse  of  the  capablenesses  that  digital  engineering science  places  in  a  user&#8217;s  hands.  Digital  camera  sales  figures  for  2003  show  that  the  two  key  players  Kodak  and  Canon  have  recorded  impressive  growth.</p>
<p>&#8211;&gt;What  does  the  future  holds  for  camera  users?</p>
<p>The  features  offered  by  digital  cameras  may  be  rather  mind-boggling  for  the  intermediate  user  and  pretty  stimulating  for  most  pros.  Four  key  ongoing  camera  developments  that  are  likely  to  further  improve  the  routine  of  photography:</p>
<p>1.  Greater  solution  from  even  the  simplest,  low  cost  camera  models</p>
<p>2.  Usage  in  any  type  of  lighting  conditions,</p>
<p>3.  Compatibility  all over  a  range  of  software,  hardware  and  effigy  types</p>
<p>4.  Rich  colors  and  tone</p>
<p>While  the  higher-end  digital  evolution  continues,  the  prices  of  the  simple  camera  have  crashed  to  such  an  extent  that  even  children  and  teens  are  proud  owners  of  unproblemati  cameras.  The  camera  and  photography  interest  starts  young  and  this  gives rise to  a  veritably  huge  audience  base  for  the  camera  industry.</p>
<p>And  allround  history,  it  is  evident  that  the  endeavor  of  researchers  and  developers  has  been  to  make  the  camera  available  to  a  wide  section  of  society.  Without  camera  engineering science  and  photography,  the  other  key  developments  of  cinema  and  TV  would  have  been  delayed  and  what  a  boring  place  the  world  would  have  been  without  TV  and  films!!</p>
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<h2>Mirriwrap  Mirror  Surface  Paper  Silver  2</h2>
<p>Mirriwrap  is  a  4pt  (100gsm)  paper  with  a  mirror  like  surface.  Manufactured  in  the  UK    Mirriwrap  is  best  known  for  it is  uniform    crystal-clear  surface  constructing  a  unfeigned  mirror-like  reflection.  A  terrific  sheet  for  scrapbooking    bookmaking    card  making    collage    demonstrations    annual  reports    and  much  more.  (One  side  of  each  sheet  has  the  mirror  surface;  the  other  side  is  matte  white  paper.)</p>
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<p>Most helpful customer reviews</p>
<p>16 of 16 people found the following review helpful.<br /><img height="11" width="56" style="margin-left:0px;margin-right:10px" class="custReviewStars" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/associates/network/star10_tpng.png" alt="1">Not good<br /><span>By Mr. Yuming Huang<br />Although claimed as a mirror, actually it&#8217;s far from being used a mirror. It&#8217;s just a metal food wrap but much more expensive.</p>
<p>4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.<br /><img height="11" width="56" style="margin-left:0px;margin-right:10px" class="custReviewStars" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/associates/network/star20_tpng.png" alt="2">Mirriwrap Mirror surface paper<br /><span>By Jessica Dirk<br />Product not as expected. Thought the paper would have been more mirror like. It is more reflective than mirror and distorts figures. Would have bought it at my local craft store instead and saved $8 in shipping.</p>
<p>1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.<br /><img height="11" width="56" style="margin-left:0px;margin-right:10px" class="custReviewStars" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/associates/network/star20_tpng.png" alt="2">Definatly not Mirror Surface<br /><span>By MaryLee<br />Shown in the sales picture is a piece of food reflecting-think it was a pear, if I recall correctly from memory.  This paper definatley does not reflect that well.  Its more like wrapping paper.</p>
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