Greeting card
PATENT OF C-3PO (1979)
Text on the reverse side: C-3PO, the Star Wars droid was programmed primarily for etiquette and protocol. Impressively, he was fluent in over six m...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: C-3PO, the Star Wars droid was programmed primarily for etiquette and protocol. Impressively, he was fluent in over six m...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: The TIE/LN starfighter or TIE/line starfighter from Star Wars, often called TIE Fighter or T/F, is often seen in huge num...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: The Star Wars starfighter, commonly referred to as the B-wing, was a heavily armed Rebel Alliance single-pilot starfighte...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: The starfighter can be identified by their distinctive S-foils resembling the High Galactic script's character "X" in att...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: The Star Wars astromech droid, often referred to as R2, served several masters over his lifetime. With independence and a...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: In 1947, the first UFO report was made. A pilot named Kenneth Arnold saw nine flying objects and described their movement...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: The origins of the word "photography" comes from Greek, meaning to draw with light. The word camera comes from Latin - “c...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: Checking the photo after snapping it on the camera is called chimping - commonly done when using a digital camera. With a...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: The world’s largest camera was built in 1899, commissioned by Chicago & Alton Railway, to take the largest photograph...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: Even though digital projectors are gradually surfacing, movie theatre preference still overwhelmingly uses analogue proje...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: In 1928, when Walt Disney created Steamboat Willie in 1928, he only had two animators working for him. By the time he cre...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: The minimum speed required for a person to process consecutive images as movement, is thirteen frames per second. Old mov...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: The stereotypical image of a movie director on location, usually includes the lightweight folding chair, and hence often ...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: The advancement of technology has made video recording more accessible and affordable. In the mid 1950s, video recorders ...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: Also called clapperboard, or slate board, they particularly played an important role in filming where the images and soun...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: In 1927, the first flash bulbs were produced by General Electric. The first bulbs were made of glass, but were eventually...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: In 1907, the first movie theatre was opened. Prior to this, most movies were shown in traditional theatres. As for top ti...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: Early cameras filmed at sixteen frames per second, which by today’s standards is incredibly slow. Modern 35mm cameras fil...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: The first motion pictures were introduced back in the late 1800s, although it usually consisted of a single scene that la...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: The first digital camera was developed by Kodak in 1975. It was dropped due to fears that it would threaten their photogr...
View full details
Greeting card
Text on the reverse side: The name of the Star Wars four-legged combat walker stands for - All Terrain Armored Transport (AT-AT). Used by the groun...
View full details