Term
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Definition
Niepce
The First Photograph
“View from His Window at Le Gras”
1827
Heliograph
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Term
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Definition
Fox Talbot
Villa Melzi
1833
Camera Lucida Drawing |
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Term
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Definition
Fox Talbot
Lattice Window
1835
Photogenic Drawing |
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Term
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Definition
Daguerre
Still Life
1837
Daguerrotype
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Term
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Definition
Daguerre
Blvd. du Temple
1838
daguerrotype |
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Term
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Definition
Bayard
Drowned Man
1840
Direct paper positive |
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Term
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Definition
Draper
Catherine Draper
1840
Collotype from a Daguerrotype |
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Term
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Definition
Fox Talbot
Nelson Column
1843
Salted paper print from calotype negative
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Term
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Definition
Fox Talbot
Open Door
from Pencil of Nature
1843
Salted paper print from calotype negative |
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Term
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Definition
Plumbe
US Capitol
1845-6
Daguerrotype
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Term
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Definition
Hill and Adamson
Redding the Line
1846
Calotype |
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Term
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Definition
Atkins
Algae
1840s-50s
Cyanotype |
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Term
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Definition
Hill and Adamson
Lady Eastlake
1845
Calotype (text) Salt print (slideshow)
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Term
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Definition
Easterly
Keokuk (on a mouse pad)
1847
Daguerrotype |
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Term
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Definition
Porter
Fairmont Water Works
1848
Daguerrotype |
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Term
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Definition
DuChamp
Abu Simbel
1850
Calotype |
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Term
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Definition
Barnard
Oswego Mills
1851
Daguerrotype
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Term
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Definition
Whipple
The Moon
1851
daguerrotype |
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Term
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Definition
Mestral
Cahors
1851
Calotype |
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Term
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Definition
Delamotte
The Open Colonnade
1853
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Nadar
Self Portrait
1855
Salt Print |
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Term
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Definition
Fenton
Crimean War, Hallewell
1855
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Baldus
Avignon
1856
Calotype |
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Term
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Definition
LeGray
Brig Upon the Water
1856
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Southworth and Hayes
Charles Sumner
1856
Daguerrotype |
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Term
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Definition
Reijlander
Two Ways of Life
1857
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Frith
Approach to Philae
1858
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Peach Robinson
Fading Away
1858
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Carroll
Liddell Sisters
1859
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Pierson
The Countess Castiglione
1860
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Fenton
Still Life
1860
albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Hawarden
Mirror
1860s
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Fenton
Harewood House
1861
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Berghaus
Matthew Brady’s NYC Studio
1861
Engraving (This is not even a photo.) |
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Term
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Definition
Bisson Freres
Ascent of Mont Blanc
1862
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
O’Sullivan
Harvest of Death
1863
Albumen
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Term
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Definition
Aubry
Leaves
1864
Albumen
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Term
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Definition
Braun
Still Life with Deer and Wildfowl
1865
Carbon print
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Term
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Definition
Nadar
Sarah Bernhardt
1865
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Gardner
Lewis Paine
1865
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Gardner
Cracked Plate Lincoln
1865
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Waldack
Mammoth Cave
1866
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Cameron
Sir John Herschel
1867
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Cameron
Julia Jackson
1867
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
O’Sullivan
Pyramid Lake
1867
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Thomson
Wu Shan Gorge
1868
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
AJ Russell
Meeting of the Rails
1869
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
O’Sullivan
Canon de Chelle
1873
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Watkins
Cathedral Rock, Yosemite
1875
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Thomson
The Crawlers
1877
Woodburytype |
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Term
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Definition
WH Jackson
Grand Canyon
1870s-80s
Albumen
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Term
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Definition
Eakins
Swimming Hole
1883
Gelatin Silver Print |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Riis
5 Cent Lodgers
1889
Gelatin Silver Print |
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Term
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Definition
Clarence White
Ring Toss
1899
Platinum Print |
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Term
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Definition
Stieglitz
Paula
1889
Gelatin Silver Print |
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Term
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Definition
Sarony
Sandow
1893
Albumen |
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Term
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Definition
Alice Austen
Hester Street
1895
Gelatin Silver Print |
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Term
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Definition
Stieglitz
Waiting for the Return
1895
Gravure Print |
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Term
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Definition
Steichen
In the Woods
1898
Platinum Print |
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Term
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Definition
FH Day
Ethiopian Chief
1896
Platinum Print
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Term
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Definition
FH Day
Christ
1898
Platinum Print |
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Term
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Definition
FBJ
Hampton Institute
1899-1900
Gelatin Silver Print
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Term
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Definition
Vroman
Hopi Maidens
1902
Platinum Print
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Term
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Definition
Curtis
Vanishing Race
1904
Photogravure |
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Term
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Definition
Brigman
The Bubble
1905
Gelatin Silver Print
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Term
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Definition
-The first method of photographic printing that made use of a negative.
-The albumen found in egg whites bonds photographic chemicals to paper.
-Very sensitive process, reacts to temperature change and can mold overtime. Start printing negatives onto glass for a far less grainy result.
-Duplicable.
1847: first Albumen process published in France 1850: Later evolved into wet-collodion process which was faster and more sensitive, published by Frederick Scott Archer |
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Term
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Definition
England
Invented the photographic wet collodion process around 1850 which increased the accessibility of photography to the general public
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Term
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Definition
Germany
German philosopher, essayist, literary critic who wrote that essay we read for class. Discusses photography as a democratic medium bc anyone can do it (unlike drawing, painting, and sculpting); thoroughly undermines the definition of art forever --- A reproduced image doesn’t have the same essence or aura that the original artwork had/has --- Mass production of photography? --- The more rare a work of art is = The more value it holds. PHOTOGRAPHY AS TRUTH Photo: captures, records, documents moments. Traditional Art: comes from perspective; isn’t always accurate or true. |
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Term
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Definition
Optical device that superimposes the view the artist is drawing onto his or her drawing surface. “Light Room” in Latin. Talbot’s Villa Mezi |
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Term
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Definition
The camera obscura is an optical device that projects an image of its surroundings on a screen. It is used in drawing and for entertainment, and was one of the inventions that led to photography and the camera. Latin for “dark room” |
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Term
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Definition
Small (2.125 in x 3.5 in) photograph usually made of an albumen print mounted to thick card board. Became enormously popular and people traded them among friends --- Very popular in the American Civil War |
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Term
Collodion/ “Wet Collodion” |
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Definition
1851, used as an alternative to albumen (egg-white) on glass plates. Tremendously reduced exposure time. Allowed for one of the first high-quality duplication process, negatives --- Produced EXTREMELY clear images --- Highly Portable! |
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Term
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Definition
1842, invented by John Herschel. Photographic printing process that gives a cyan-blue print. Discovered by Herschel in 1842 Objects placed in coated paper create a silhouette effect. |
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Term
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Definition
created a limited series of cyanotype books that documented plant life from her seaweed collection. Atkins placed specimens directly onto the coated paper causing a silhouetted effect --- After using this photogram process, Atkins is regarded as the first female photographer ------- DICTYOTA DICHOTOMA |
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Term
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Definition
France
French artist and physicist known as one of the fathers of photography for inventing the daguerreotype. Developer of diorama theatre. --- His research in photographic processes with Niepce was supported by the French government. |
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Term
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Definition
1839, First commercially successful photographic process --- French government purchased patent from Daguerre then freely shared the process with the world. Direct positive made in camera on a silvered copper plate --- NON-REPRODUCIBLE --- Were both cheap and easily accessible for the people creating them as well as people who wanted their portraits captured.
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Term
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Definition
A theatrical experience viewed by an audience in a highly specialized theatre. As many as 350 patrons would file in to view a landscape painting that would change its appearance both subtly and dramatically |
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Term
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Definition
A form of theatre which used a modified magic lantern to project frightening images such as skeletons, demons, and ghosts onto walls, smoke, or semi-transparent screens, frequently using rear projection. |
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Term
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Definition
Talbot’s initial description of the process to his friend John Herschel --- Term used to describe photography before it became “photography” |
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Term
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Definition
An image created by light falling on a light-sensitive surface --- The term “Photography” comes from HERSCHEL who also helped Talbot develop his fixing process to produce clearer images. |
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Term
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Definition
Slide projector or "magic lantern", which has two lenses, usually one above the other --- As it developed and improved over time, it also led to the invention of “moving pictures” (movies/films) |
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Term
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Definition
In this technique, a sheet of paper coated with silver chloride was exposed to light in a camera obscura; those areas hit by light became dark in tone, yielding a negative image. The revolutionary aspect of the process lay in Talbot's discovery of a chemical ( gallic acid) that could be used to "develop" the image on the paper --- Introduced to the public AFTER Daguerreotypes --- He charged people to share the process with them whereas Daguerre’s was offered freely to any person; thus Talbotypes weren’t very successful (financially) |
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Definition
A photograph made by creating a direct positive on a sheet of iron metal that is blackened by painting, lacquering or enamelling and is used as a support for a collodionphotographic emulsion. |
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Term
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Definition
1841-43, frenchmen traveled and photographed major monuments throughout the world. Compilation of several photographs. Major contribution to travel photography. |
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Term
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Definition
A French inventor --- Worked with Daguerre --- most noted as one of the inventors of photography. He developed heliography (bitumen/lavender oil process on pewter plates), a technique used to produce what is now recognized as the world's first known photograph in 1825. |
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Term
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Definition
British inventor and photography pioneer who invented the calotype process, a precursor to photographic processes of the 19th and 20th centuries. DEVELOPED NEGATIVE IMAGES THAT WERE REPRODUCIBLE --- “Photogenic Drawing” --- Talbot was also a noted photographer who made major contributions to the development of photography as an artistic medium “The Lattice Window” --- 1835 --- First successful negative image - Approx. Size: Large Postage Stamp “Talbotype” (1841)--- Introduced to public after the Daguerreotype; Not very successful as he charged for others to use his process whereas Daguerre’s process was free to the general public. |
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