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1876 in animation
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1876 in animation

Events in 1876 in animation.

Events

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  • November 9: The English inventor Wordsworth Donisthorpe files a patent for a film camera, which he named a "kinesigraph."[1] The camera would have a mechanism to move photographic plates one by one past a lens and shutter to be exposed for the necessary time and then dropped or carried into a receiver. The recorded images would be printed at equal distances apart on a strip of paper. The strip was to be wound between cylinders and carried past the eye of the observer, with a stroboscopic device to expose each picture momentarily. Such photographic strips only became commercially available several years later and Donisthorpe seems to have been unable to produce motion pictures at this stage.[2] Donisthorpe reportedly produced a model of this camera around the late 1870s.[3] In 1889, Donisthorpe completed his work on an improved version of the camera and the projector necessary to show the motion frames.[4]In 1890, Donisthorpe and his cousin W. C. Crofts created a moving picture of London's Trafalgar Square.[5]
  • Specific date unknown:

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