George Eastman
Dry, transparent, and flexible photographic films

A combination of research, experimentation, and entrepreneurship, George Eastman, born in 1854 in Waterville, New York, revolutionized photography and founded one of the world's best-known corporations. His hardships and personal struggles in his early life, made George strive for financial success and security.

George Eastman
George Eastman
(1854 -1932)

Credit: invent.org

In 1877, Eastman began work in photography: his specialty was preparing and applying the complex emulsions (liquid silver-salt coatings) used at that time in developing nearly all-photographic plates. Inspired by an article in a British almanac, Eastman dreamed of creating a "dry plate" developing process: dry film would make the developing process incomparably simpler, and could be contained within many smaller and lighter cameras. Within two years, Eastman had built a "Method and Apparatus for Coating Plates" which made dry film a reality.

Subsequent innovations followed. In 1885, Eastman began marketing the world's first commercial film: transparent and flexible, it could be cut into narrow strips and used while wound on a spindle. In 1888, Eastman introduced his "Kodak" to the market: a compact box camera with 100 exposures' worth of film, priced at $25. Many improvements have been made since then, all non-digital hand-held cameras used today evolved from that first Kodak.

Among his other innovations, George Eastman developed an improved film for Edison's motion-picture camera. Today, Eastman Kodak Corporation continues to make photographic high technology available to the average person. Eastman was a great American philanthropist: through various programs, he had given away over $100 million by his death in 1932.


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