an incredible invention

16
An Incredible Invention Photography: 1837-1918

Upload: topaz

Post on 26-Feb-2016

119 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

An Incredible Invention. Photography: 1837-1918. Types of Photographic Images. Daguerreotypes Ambrotypes Tintypes Albumens (CDVS, cabinet cards) Real photo postcards. Daguerreotypes (1837-1860). Invented by a French chemist named Louis Daguerre - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: An Incredible Invention

An Incredible Invention

Photography: 1837-1918

Page 2: An Incredible Invention

Daguerreotypes Ambrotypes Tintypes Albumens (CDVS, cabinet cards) Real photo postcards

Types of Photographic Images

Page 3: An Incredible Invention

Invented by a French chemist named Louis Daguerre The first photo ever taken was a street scene in Paris The daguerreotype was made on a copper plate

coated with polished silver It took approximately 3-4 minutes for the image to

be burned onto the plate (longer if the lighting was poor)

The sitter had a neck brace to keep them still Studios had huge skylights to let in as much light as

possible.

Daguerreotypes (1837-1860)

Page 4: An Incredible Invention
Page 5: An Incredible Invention

Portraits of people are the most

common

Page 6: An Incredible Invention

Portraits of animals and outdoor images

are rare

Page 7: An Incredible Invention

Ambrotypes were really just daguerreotypes

done on glass. They were much cheaper to produce and

cheaper to make They are really a negative image on a glass

plate backed with black paint or black fabric to make them into a “positive”

Ambrotypes (1854-1865)

Page 8: An Incredible Invention

Why do you think the ambrotype was not popular for very long?

Page 9: An Incredible Invention

Tintypes (1854-1900)

Page 10: An Incredible Invention

Tintypes replaced ambrotypes and

daguerreotypes because they were much more durable and cheaper to produce.

They were made on a thin plate of sheet iron coated with a thin black varnish

Page 11: An Incredible Invention

Albumens, Carte de visites ( CDVs), and

Cabinet Cards A glass negative was used to produce

numerous paper “positives” The paper was coated with egg whites and

other chemicals Very popular because you could leave the

photographers studio with more than one image. You could also write messages on them and give them away

Images on paper

Page 12: An Incredible Invention

Do you recognize these two

famous personalities both taken in cdv format?

Page 13: An Incredible Invention

Rare cdv of a locomotive in Pennsylvania

Page 14: An Incredible Invention

Examples of Rare

Cabinet Cards

Page 15: An Incredible Invention

Real Photo PostcardsThis was a gimmick that became very popular: Have a picture taken of yourself and send it off to someone you love as a postcard!

Page 16: An Incredible Invention

Post mortems were a part of 19th century

culture. For some, this was the only picture they may have of a loved one.

Post Mortem Photography