Assuming you mean the first to be made permanent, that would be Joseph Nicéphore Niépce, circa 1826.
Andy warhol
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The First photo-1827 Joseph Nicephore Niépce produces the first successful picture over an eight hour exposure time. French inventor Joseph Nicephore Niepce uses a camera obscura to burn a permanent image of the countryside at his Le Gras, France estate onto chemical-coated paper. He names the technique heliography, meaning sun drawing. The black and white image exposure takes eight hours and fades significantly, but an image is still visible today. For a fuller answer, Google 'Firsts in the recording of sight and sound'.
No camera obscura did this.
Niépce is generally credited with the first two permanent photographic images. http://fosgrafe.files.wordpress.com/2007/11/view_from_the_window_at_le_gras_joseph_nicephore_niepce.jpg
Nicéphore Niépce is credited with making the first permanent photographic image in 1826. Other permanent images were created earlier than this, but they were not truly of a photographic nature. They related more so to photo etching (heliographic process).
Photographic images were being made in 1878. Joseph Nicéphore Niépce made a few photographic pictures in 1827.
No, hornets do not have the cognitive ability to have photographic memory and accurately recall images from their past experiences.
Oral/facial photographic images
You can quickly access specific photographic images for your website by using online stock photo websites like Shutterstock or Adobe Stock, or by searching for images on search engines like Google Images and ensuring they are labeled for reuse.
The images were made using a Graflex camera. http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/list/128_migm.html
Assuming you mean the first to be made permanent, that would be Joseph Nicéphore Niépce, circa 1826.
There are some differences between Hockney's Photographic collages and his Composite Polaroid images. One difference is that the Composite Polaroid images are all broken up into equal size squares while the Photographic collages are broke up into rectangles. Another difference between the two is that the Composite Polaroid images all have the white boarder around each individual part of the whole image breaking it up to look like little frames while the Photographic collages have no boarder or edge allowing them to blend seamlessly. A final difference between the two is that the Composite Polaroid images do not over lap while the images that make up the Photographic collages do overlap in some places. These differences give each media it own unique quality.
Andy warhol
I'm not sure daguerreotype has an exact synonym. It's a photographic process with images made on a light-sensitive silver-coated metallic plate. I suppose you could use 'photographic process' as a synonym, but I can't think of any good synonyms for such a thing.
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