Question:
Hey, so how does a camera work?
CurlyQ
2008-09-25 17:26:48 UTC
I was just curious to know. I was walking home and i thought of that, and i'm really intrested to know. Not just digital cameras, but film ones too.
Sixteen answers:
Steven W
2008-09-26 14:47:47 UTC
I'll stick to the Film portion - I know that mechanism far more than the digital process.



First, film is a strip of acetate coated in an emulsion with microscopic light sensitive Silver Halide crystals (AgF, AgCl, AgI...). Each of the films are rated at a different ISO, depending on how light sensitive the film is.



When the Shutter release is pressed, the camera lens' aperture closes down according to the camera's setting, the mirror flips up, and the shutter speed opens for as much time as the camera's set for. During this time, the light is striking the Silver Halide crystals. When bits of light strike the crystals, they become excited and parts of the crystal break the bonds and become elemental silver. Not the entire crystal, but parts of it.



**Black and White**



During the development process, the Developer turns the exposed crystals and makes them into elemental silver, as well as changing parts of the surrounding crystals. Then in the Fixer phase of development, the remaining Silver Halides are dissolved in the fixer. Then the fixer reside is removed and the film is washed and dried making a negative image.



**Color Negative/Slide**



The film is made of multiple layers of silver halide emulsions with different colored dyes. First is the First Developer, which turns the exposed portions into elemental silver. Then the second Developer/Color Developer sets the color for the areas that are exposed. Bleach removes the non-exposed area's dyes and the fixer removes all of the silver. Then the film dries.



It's been a while since I've actually done much with C-41/RA-4 and E-6, but that's generally how I remember it.
Haruka
2008-09-25 17:32:04 UTC
Yay we just learned about this in Photography :D



For the film camera, there is a shutter, which is kind of like a curtain, that blocks the film from light. When you press the button to take a picture, the shutter opens for a bit (like 1/500th of a second) and lets the light hit the film. Then when you';re done with the roll of film you take it out after its all wound up (so light won't hit it and make the pictures overexposed) and take it in to be developed.



Digital cameras work in basically the same way. They have the shutter, but instead of film, they record the images on a memory card.





If you want to know more, just ask :)
Desi
2008-09-26 12:26:26 UTC
To start off the camera is a light tight box ( basically ), In film photography Photographic emulsions are the basic light-sensitive materials on which you would record the image. They consist of insoluble halides (salts of silver) suspended in gelatin and coated onto a support of transparent plastic film or opaque paper. The manufacturer of film controls the sensitivity of an emulsion to light.



Rays of light, originating from an object, enter through the camera lens. As they pass through the lens, the lens elements refract them or change their direction. Refraction causes the diverging rays of light to converge and intersect at a precise distance behind the lens. The rays are brought into focus and form a sharp, inverted image of the object.



When the film is struck by this light that enters in through the lens it darkens the emulsions in the film. The greater amount of light, the darker the film becomes. That is how images are formed in film photography. The basic principles apply to digital, only the light hits the CCD and stores that image to a memory card.
Gary Beady
2008-09-25 17:33:57 UTC
Since the first digital backs were introduced, there have been three main methods of capturing the image, each based on the hardware configuration of the sensor and color filters.



The first method is often called single-shot, in reference to the number of times the camera's sensor is exposed to the light passing through the camera lens. Single-shot capture systems use either one CCD with a Bayer filter mosaic, or three separate image sensors (one each for the primary additive colors red, green, and blue) which are exposed to the same image via a beam splitter.



The second method is referred to as multi-shot because the sensor is exposed to the image in a sequence of three or more openings of the lens aperture. There are several methods of application of the multi-shot technique. The most common originally was to use a single image sensor with three filters (once again red, green and blue) passed in front of the sensor in sequence to obtain the additive color information. Another multiple shot method utilized a single CCD with a Bayer filter but actually moved the physical location of the sensor chip on the focus plane of the lens to "stitch" together a higher resolution image than the CCD would allow otherwise. A third version combined the two methods without a Bayer filter on the chip.



The third method is called scanning because the sensor moves across the focal plane much like the sensor of a desktop scanner. Their linear or tri-linear sensors utilize only a single line of photosensors, or three lines for the three colors. In some cases, scanning is accomplished by rotating the whole camera; a digital rotating line camera offers images of very high total resolution.



The choice of method for a given capture is determined largely by the subject matter. It is usually inappropriate to attempt to capture a subject that moves with anything but a single-shot system. However, the higher color fidelity and larger file sizes and resolutions available with multi-shot and scanning backs make them attractive for commercial photographers working with stationary subjects and large-format photographs.



Recently, dramatic improvements in single-shot cameras and RAW image file processing have made single shot, CCD-based cameras almost completely predominant in commercial photography, not to mention digital photography as a whole. CMOS-based single shot cameras are also somewhat common.
Yungangel1717
2008-09-25 17:35:53 UTC
1. Turn on the power of camera, usually found on top of the camera.

2. Shoot and press the button. Usually found next to or across the power button.

3. Customization is up to you.



Film:



1. DO NOT TURN ON THE CAMERA.

2. On the back open the lid to the camera, Load the film carefully into the camera and not exposed to the light.

3. Close the lid when you load and film. Turn on the camera and shoot and snap.



Have fun.
A1
2008-09-25 17:31:01 UTC
The camera flashes and the picture that you looked through the lens gets flashed into a little film strip, how does it get flashed into the strip, the flash makes everything sensitive and allowing it be captured on that special film. then developers enlarge the strips and color them in according the the negatives and positive. :)
AcerSUCKS
2008-09-25 17:32:49 UTC
when you take a picuture the image is transer into a little pice of image in a chip the larger the image is the more pixels it has , then is transerd from a usb or card disk to the computer then it is formated to a jpeg or any other type image
anonymous
2008-09-25 17:29:57 UTC
There are little men in the camera that look at what your trying to take and draw it as fast as possible.



lol jk i would like to know too.
anonymous
2008-09-25 17:30:59 UTC
haha! that was great! are you like 3? how do you not know how to use a camera?

i was seriously laughing for like 5 minutes
Windextor
2008-09-25 17:30:29 UTC
depends what kind of camera you have....film cameras take longer to explain
Samtheman
2008-09-25 17:29:58 UTC
it captures all of the colors that it sees and copies it onto film.
mmk
2008-09-25 17:29:17 UTC
you teh click button and ze picture go ca chinngg
anonymous
2008-09-25 17:30:29 UTC
Try this site, it's very cool: http://www.howstuffworks.com/camera.htm
Tamara A
2008-09-25 17:30:30 UTC
http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/camera.htm



:)
anonymous
2008-09-25 17:30:08 UTC
BARBIE NOT ONE PUPPY BUT THREE
joker
2008-09-25 17:29:46 UTC
just point and shoot babe


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