Stop Motion Animation
Stop motion (also known as stop frame) is an animation technique to make a physically manipulated object appear to move on its own. The object is moved in small increments between individually photographed frames, creating the illusion of movement when the series of frames is played as a continuous sequence. Dolls with movable joints or clay figures are often used in stop motion for their ease of repositioning. Stop motion animation using plasticine is called clay animation or "clay-mation"
Joseph Plateau
Wills O Brien

Ray Harryhausen
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Szgam0NeUf0
William Horner
William Horner was a British mathematician; he was a: schoolmaster, headmaster and schoolkeeper, who wrote extensively on functional equations, number theory and approximation theory, but also on optics. His contribution to approximation theory is honoured in the designation Horner's method, this then lead to him gaining huge respect in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London for 1819. The modern invention of the zoetrope, under the name Daedaleum in 1834, has been awarded to him. A zoetrope is one of many pre-cinema animation devices that produce the illusion of motion by displaying a sequence of drawings or photographs in a short period of time creating the illusion. The zoetrope consists of a cylinder with slits cut vertically in the sides. On the inner surface of the cylinder is a band with images from a set of sequenced pictures. As the cylinder spins, the user looks through the slits at the pictures across. This amazing idea and creation was then later developed and improved in many many years down the line.

Edward James Muggeridge was born on April 9, 1830 to John and Susan Muggeridge of Kingston upon Thames, England. At age twenty, he immigrated to America, first to New York, working as a bookseller, and then to San Francisco, where he acquired an interest in photography in 1855. At this time, he changed his surname to Muybridge. As Muybridge's reputation as a photographer grew in the late 1800s, former California Governor Leland Stanford contacted him to help settle a bet. Speculation raged for years over whether all four hooves of a running horse left the ground. Stanford believed they did, but the motion was too fast for human eyes to detect. In 1872, Muybridge began experimenting with an array of 12 cameras photographing a galloping horse in a sequence of shots. After experiementing for several years and study at university Muybridge finally presented his photographic methods using a projection device he'd developed, the Zoopraxiscope. The zoopraxiscope projected images from rotating glass disks in rapid succession to give the impression of motion.
Auguste
Marie Louis Nicolas Born -19 October 1862 in Besançon,
France and died on the 10th April 1954 in Lyon. Louis
Jean born on the 5th October 1864 in Besançon, France then he died on the 6th
June 1948 in Bandol.
Also they were the earliest filmmakers in history. Louis
Lumière worked with his brother Auguste to create a motion picture camera
superior to Edison’s kinetoscope.
They called it a cinematograph, it was a motion picture film camera, which also
serves as a film projector and developer. It was invented in the 1890s by Léon Bouly but
because he did not have the funds to carry everything on the Lumiere
Brothers bought the license off him which is why they are remembered for
creating the cinematograph not Bouly.
Jan Svankmajer is a Czech filmmaker and artist whose work spans several media. He is a self-labeled surrealist known for his animations and features, which have greatly influenced other artists such as Terry Gilliam, the Brothers Quay, and many others.
William Horner
Emile Reynaud
Emile Reynaud was a French inventor, responsible for the first projected animated cartoons. Reynaud created the Prexinoscope in 1877. On 28th October 1892 he projected the first animated film in public, it was caslled Pauvre Pierrot, at the Musee Grevin in Paris. The praxinoscope was an animation device, very similar to the zeotrope. Like the zoetrope, it used a strip of pictures placed around the inner surface of a spinning cylinder. The praxinoscope improved on the zoetrope by replacing its narrow viewing slits with an inner circle of mirrors, placed so that the reflections of the pictures appeared more or less stationary in position as the wheel turned. Someone looking in the mirrors would therefore see a quick amount of images producing the illusion of motion, with a brighter and less distorted picture than the zoetrope offered.
Edward Muybridge
Thomas Edison
Thomas Edison was an American inventor and businessman. He developed many devices that greatly influenced life around the world, including the phonograph, the motion picture camera and also the kinetoscope. The Kinetoscope is an early motion picture exhibition device. The Kinetoscope was designed for films to be viewed by one individual at a time through a peephole viewer window at the top of the device. The Kinetoscope was not a movie projector but introduced the basic approach that would become the standard for all cinematic projection before the advent of video, by creating the illusion of movement by conveying a strip of perforated film bearing sequential images over a light source with a high-speed shutter.Lumiere Brothers.

George Pal
George Pal was a Hungarian-born American animator and film producer, principally associated with the science fiction genre. He became an American citizen after emigrating from Europe. He was nominated for Academy Awards (in the category Best short subjects, Cartoon) no less than seven consecutive years (1942–1948) and received an honorary award in 1944. He was famous for making a number of films through out a long time period and that is the reason he was nominated for so many awards.
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