Pathé Baby camera was the first camera to be marketed amateur film, and one of the smallest we had ever made before. It pioneered the introduction of more cheap and affordable 9.5 mm film tape 35 mm was used then. It apart from the innovations contributed, was characterized to be very tiny (11x10x5 cm and weight 615 grams). It worked with a manual shutter recorded to 14-16 frames per second, and incorporated a target F 1: 3.5 20mm. It was made of aluminum lined leather black or brown, and reached more than 300,000 devices manufactured between 1923 and 1930. The original Pathé Baby camera model appeared on the market for the first time in 1923, and allowed amateur filmmakers to record their own movies with an economical, practical and simple system. The original manual camera was added subsequent improvements as automating the shutter from a clockwork, and during the next two decades new camera models developed as Pathé Motocamera (1928), the Pathé Mondial (1932 ), the Pathé Baby Royal (1936) or the Pathé National (1946). Pathé Baby is a system of amateur film invented by Victor Continsouza, manufactured and marketed by the French company Pathé Frères between 1922 and 1946 noted to be one of the first film systems conceived and designed to bring the cinema home. It consisted of a small camera and a desktop projector that worked with 9.5 mm perforated film formed which had also introduced that system. Its exceptionally small measure by the time it went on the market with innovative and affordable movie format used caused the system to become very popular during the decades of the 1920s and 1930.1