n early precursor of the modern-day camera. The camera obscura (French: dark room) began as a crude device where a tiny hole in a wall would act as a lens having a very small aperture, projecting an inverted image on the opposite wall of a darkened room. First mentioned by Aristotle in the fourth century, [...]
n early precursor of the modern-day camera. The camera obscura (French: dark room) began as a crude device where a tiny hole in a wall would act as a lens having a very small aperture, projecting an inverted image on the opposite wall of a darkened room. First mentioned by Aristotle in the fourth century, it was eventually developed as a projection method used by artist as a drawing aid.

