FMP: Florida Memory Project
      State Library and Archives of Florida | Site Map | Contact Us     
 
  Home Florida Photographic Collection Online Classroom Highlights of Florida History Collections Timeline  

 FMP Home > Florida Photographic Collection > Photo Exhibits


Photo Exhibits

Alligators

Baseball

Black History

Bob Graham

Bush Years

Cigar Workers

Conch Town

Daguerreotype to Digital

Everglades

Folklife Postcards

Golf

Harper Collection

Hurricanes

Key West

Kingsley Plantation

Jacksonville Fire

Migrant Workers

Movies

Pets

Roxcy Bolton

Seminoles

Spanish - American War

Winter Holidays

Women's History

Women Who Serve

Yamato Colony

Site Map

Contact Us
 
Previous  
Digital Photography
Period of Use: 1991 - present 

Flag flying in front of Old Capitol : Tallahassee, Florida

Digital cameras have a lens, aperture, and shutter, but they do not use film. Instead, digital cameras use a solid-state device called an image sensor. Photosensitive diodes on the surface of the image sensor convert light passing through the lens into electrical impulses.

The charge from each of the photosensitive diodes is measured and converted into a digital number. The final image is composed of a series of square picture elements (pixels), each with its own numerical value.

Digital images are convenient because they do not require chemicals or paper to process. They can be displayed on a web page, sent via e-mail, stored on a computer hard drive or a compact disc, and printed on a page.


Examples of Digital Images:      

Side view of the R. A. Gray Building : Tallahassee, Florida

T-shirt from the 2000 presidential election vote dispute

 

 

Introduction | Daguerreotype | Ambrotype | Tintype | Glass Negatives | Salt Prints | Crayon Portraits | Cyanotypes | Albumen Prints | Stereoview | Lantern Slides | Nitrocellulose Film | Safety Film | Polyester | Digital

 

 

 

 


 


NEW AND NOTEWORTHY ON FLORIDA MEMORY
Broadsides   Florida Blues   Cigar Workers
Selling, Telling, and Yelling: Florida broadsides and other ephemera, 1800-2000 Before television, radio, and the internet, Florida society communicated widely and often through broadsides, advertisements, flyers, and other ephemera.   Florida Blues Each of our neighboring southern states has placed a unique brand on the music’s form and sound—Florida hasn’t done a bad job of that in its own right.   Florida Cigars: Artistry, Labor, and Politics in Florida’s Oldest Industry Commercial cigar rolling first came to Florida in the 1830s and in the decades after the Civil War it became one of the most important industries in the southeastern United States.

 


Great Seal of the State of Florida  
The Florida Memory Project is funded under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act, from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, administered by the Florida Department of State, State Library & Archives of Florida. Contact Us. Disclaimer.

Florida’s history is your history. Help us preserve it by joining the Friends of the State Library & Archives of Florida.


MyFlorida.com