Photography is a diverse and interesting art form. And these fun photography facts are sure to spike your interest even further.
Find out why people didn’t smile in old photographs and discover how much photographers love capturing their cats. We also have photography facts about the first digital camera.
Read on to learn 25 fun, intriguing, and mind-bending photography facts.
Let’s get stuck into some fun photography facts. We hope these article shine a new light on photography for you. You might have to stifle a chuckle at some of them.
In 1975, Steven Sasson invented the world’s first digital camera. He was working at Eastman Kodak at the time.
Steven’s camera weighed around 8 pounds (3.6kg) and shot only 0.01MP. The average weight of a modern DSLR is around 2 pounds. A full frame mirrorless camera weighs even less and have sensor’s with resolutions of up to 60 MP!
Dilish Parekh, a photojournalist from Mumbai, has the largest camera collection. He owns 4,425 antique cameras.
In 1828, Louis Daguerre took the first photo that captured a human being. His intention was to take a photo of the Boulevard du Temple in Paris.
The man in his photo was standing in the street, getting his shoes polished. Since the exposure lasted for seven minutes, the man also got captured.
In 1861, Thomas Sutton suggested the process to create the world’s first color image.
The result of layering three separate images of red, green, and blue filters. These were then projected onto a photosensitive plate with the corresponding filters.
Sutton was a great photographer and inventor. Around the same time as the color photograph, he also created the first SLR camera.
He was also the one who developed the earliest panoramic camera with a wide-angle lens in 1859. The photography world owes a lot to him.
When we think of an image, we think of a photo or landscape on a screen. We forget that tiny holes are enough to allow a projection of any given scene. Glass isn’t even needed.
The first projected image was through a Camera Obscura. It is a literal translation from Latin, meaning Dark Room. The principle was first recorded by Mozi, a Chinese philosopher, between 470 to 391 BCE.
This was a dark box with a tiny hole that let in light. The light replicated the outside scene on a screen or wall opposite the hole.
One of the interesting camera obscura facts is that the reflected image was upside down. This is the idea behind the pinhole camera.
One of the most dangerous photography facts is about flashes. Photographers mixed potassium chloride and aluminum. This mixture would create a bright light when introduced to a spark.
These connections often led to violent explosions if they were not properly mixed. If you have a Speedlite, you have it easy.
Sold in 2022 for $12,400,000, Man Ray’s Le Violon d’Ingres is now the most expensive photograph of all time.
Although it was sold in Christie’s in 2022, it was actually produced one hundred years ago in 2024.
Man Ray is a seminal photographer and one of the most well-known in history. His work was experimental and avant-guard, as he added introduced elements of Dada and surrealism into his work. Le Violon d’Ingres is his most recognizable work.
The daguerreotype was a photographic process created by Louis-Jacques-Mande Daguerre.
The entire process from start to finish was very complicated. But without it, we wouldn’t be where we are today. It was the first image capturing device.
A camera made by French manufacturers Susse Freres (Susse Brothers) in 1839 sold in 2007 for almost $800,000.
There is no number for how many photos are taken a day. But, estimates suggest that more than 1 trillion photos are taken in a year.
On average, 95 million photos are uploaded daily on Instagram. Over 300 million photos are uploaded to Facebook every day. That doesn’t even account for all the photos taken that are not uploaded onto social media.
Most brands have a strong connection between their product and their name.
For example, Canon means a rule, law or principle. Ilford takes its name from its birthplace, and Olympus is the home of the Greek Gods.
But Kodak, on the other hand, has no real meaning.
George Eastman, the founder of Kodak, said that the letter ‘K’ sounded strong, so he formed a word around it.
You might think that funny cat photos are a trend that began a few years ago. It is still one of the most popular searches in Google. But, cat photography has origins in the 19th century.
This viral trend was born in the 1870s when Harry Pointer took a photo of his cat and started it all. Someone please thank that man!
We all know when the first SLR camera was invented (look at number 20). It wasn’t until 120 years later was the auto-focus feature added.
The camera manufacturer that did this was Polaroid. This might surprise you as they get their fame from instant cameras and film
French inventor Gaspard-Félix Tournachon captured the first aerial image in 1858.
Nadar, as he was otherwise known, was a balloonist who frequented the heights above Paris.
He took his camera on one trip. Sadly, though, the images no longer exist.
Not only was it taken almost 200 years ago, but it took 8 hours to capture! The photo was taken by Joseph Niepce and named ‘view from the window’.
The scene took place in Saint-Loup-de-Varennes, France. The photo shows the surrounding castle and other buildings.
A projected image from the window hit a sensitized plate, which was then used to place the image on paper. A lot of work went into this photo, and we are lucky it survived.
When the Apollo 11 mission took off for the moon, they carried 12 Hasselblad cameras with them. They are still there, on the moon.
The astronauts decided the cameras were too heavy for the return journey. So, they left them behind to make space for the 25 kilos of rock samples they brought back.
They did, however, bring the film back with them.
Well, it wasn’t made from the same stuff we make roads and pavements from. It was, however, made into varnish and applied to copper or glass plates.
The asphalt was commonly known as Bitumen. It was a black viscous liquid that was light-sensitive.
A surprising photography fact is that one of the most popular subjects used to be dead bodies.
This was a way to record the memory and physical appearance of the deceased family member.
Thank God this is one trend we left behind.
You might not believe it, but Caffenol is a real thing. Use coffee, vitamin C, and washing soda to develop your black and white negatives.
The first two ingredients bind together to form a developer. The washing soda adds alkalinity to the solution, allowing you to develop images.
You can check out Caffenol Concoction for more information on the process!
This photography fact might not be surprising. The most viewed photograph is the default wallpaper for Windows XP. The image named ‘Bliss”, captured by Charles O’Rear in 1996.
He didn’t make as much money as you would imagine. Microsoft bought the image from stock website Corbis.
This is almost one of those photography facts that you wish you didn’t know. But once you know it, you can never unknow it.
Every two minutes, we snap more pictures than the whole of humanity did in the 1800s.
Only a few million images were taken in the 80 years leading up to the first commercial camera. In 1999, Kodak reported that we had taken approximately 80 billion pictures.
The estimate is that we share 730 billion images a year on Facebook alone. Thanks for all the food images and selfies, guys.
Apparently, the left side of our faces looks better in photos than the right side. A study conducted by Kelsey Blackburn and James Schrillo from Wake Forest University confirms this.
Their study shows that the left side of our face exhibits a greater intensity of emotion. Because of this, we perceive it as being more attractive.
Photography went through many technological advances before it reached the first film negative. These included the Camera Obscura and the Daguerreotype.
It was none other than William Henry Fox Talbot who created the first negative. It became known as a salted Calotype.
He mixed silver iodide and a developing agent to create the negative. The developing agent was a mixture of gallic acid and silver nitrate.
His negative made reprinting positive images easy and quick through contact printing.
This event occurred in 1839, but he didn’t announce it until 1841. This is part of the reason why Fox gained the Rumford medal of the Royal Society a few years later.
Joseph Nicéphore Niépce was the creator of the first recorded image. He is, however, better known for his other inventions, propellers and boats.
Joseph Nicéphore Niépce also invented the first internal combustion engine, called the Pyréolophore, with his brother in 1807.
Old photographs were taken with huge large format cameras. Because the technology wasn’t as advanced, an image would take hours to expose correctly.
The subjects didn’t smile because they had to stay still for hours for one photo. Taking a photo often involved the use of a head brace for support. Understandably, smiling for hours was an impossible feat.
Or perhaps they were all deceased family members (see number 8).
Photography has a rich history stretching back over one hundred years. And as fascinating as these photography facts are, they’re just an introduction into the brilliant world of photography. They are just the tip of the iceberg.
We hope this article has enlightened, educated, and tickled your funny bone. Head to our homepage to see more incredible article about photography.