Eadweard Muybridge was an English photographer. He was most known for his pioneering work in the photographic studies of motion and the early works of motion picture projection. When Muybridge was 20, he emigrated to America. Later he planned a return trip back to Europe in 1860. Whilst Muybridge was in America he suffered serious head injuries in a crash in Texas. Muybridge spent the next few years recovering back in England, this is where he took up professional photography. He later returned to San Fransisco in 1867 and in 1868 his photographs of Yosemite Valley made him world famous. Today, Muybridge is known for his pioneering work on animal locomotion in 1877. He achieved this by using numerous camera to capture motion in stop-motion. Muybridge used a zoopraxiscope to project motion pictures on flexible film used in cinematography. In the 1880's, Muybridge produced over 100,000 photograph...
Harold Eugene Edgerton who is also known as 'Papa Flash'. He was an electrical engineer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is hugely credited for the transformation of the stroboscope from an unknown laboratory instrument, into a common device. Edgerton was also involved in the development of deep-sea photography and sonar. Edgerton was born in Nebraska on April 6 1903. Edgerton also grew up in Nebraska and later spent some of his childhood in Washington D.C. Edgerton credited Charles Stark Draper for inspiring him to photographing everyday objects with the use of an electronic flash. In 1937, Edgerton started what was a lifelong association with a photographer named Gjon Milii. He used numerous studio electronic flash units, to create stunningly striking photographs. When taking multi flash photographs, the strobe lighting was able to flash up to 120 times a second. Edgerton was the p...