John Herrman on September 29th, 2009

In 1878 Charles Bennett, a gentleman, discovered a new gelatin dry plate emulsion, which allowed for photos to be exposed almost instantaneously. So how did he show off his amazing new technology? By blowing up a mule, naturally.

The experiment ran thusly: A mule was strapped with dynamite, which was connected to a detonator. The very same switch that controled the detonator was connected to the camera, so as to trigger an exposure during, or slightly after, the poor animal’s head was a-sploded. And verily! An 1881 issue of Scientific American recounts the horrifying event with bizarre earnestness, excerpted in the gallery:

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[Stereoviews via Things Magazine via Metafilter]

Continue reading about Man, They Just Don’t Make Tech Demos Like They Used To

Sean Fallon on August 6th, 2009

Explore the history of photography by examining the 85 vintage photo ads hand-plucked from the Popular Photography archives. Is that a side boob on the 1937 premier issue? Now that’s how you launch a magazine. Scandalous! [PopPhoto]

Continue reading about 85 Vintage Photography Ads: From Shutters To Side Boobs