Everything about The Daguerreotype totally explained
The
daguerreotype is an early type of
photograph, developed by
Louis Daguerre, in which the image is exposed directly onto a
mirror-polished surface of
silver bearing a coating of
silver halide particles deposited by
iodine vapor. In later developments
bromine and
chlorine vapors were also used, resulting in shorter exposure times. The daguerreotype is a negative image, but the mirrored surface of the metal plate reflects the image and makes it appear positive in the proper light. Thus, daguerreotype is a direct photographic process without the capacity for duplication.
While the daguerreotype wasn't the first photographic process to be invented, earlier processes required hours for successful exposure, which made daguerreotype the first commercially viable photographic process and the first to permanently record and fix an image with exposure time compatible with
portrait photography.
The daguerreotype is named after one of its inventors,
French artist and
chemist Louis J.M. Daguerre, who announced its perfection in 1839 after years of research and collaboration with
Joseph Nicéphore Niépce, applying and extending a discovery by
Johann Heinrich Schultz (1724): a silver and chalk mixture darkens when exposed to light. The
French Academy of Sciences announced the daguerreotype process on January 9 of that year.
Daguerre's French patent was acquired by the French government. In Britain, Miles Berry, acting on Daguerre's behalf, obtained a patent for the daguerreotype process on
August 14,
1839. Almost simultaneously, on
August 19,
1839, the
French government announced the invention a gift "Free to the World".
Daguerreotype process
The daguerreotype is a unique photographic image allowing no reproduction of the picture. Preparation of the plate prior to image exposure resulted in the formation of a layer of photo-sensitive
silver halide, and exposure to a scene or image through a focusing lens formed a
latent image. The latent image was made visible, or "developed", by placing the exposed plate over a slightly heated (about 75°C) cup of
mercury.
The mercury vapour condensed on those places where the exposure light was most intense, in proportion with the areas of highest density in the image. This produced a picture in an
amalgam, the mercury vapour attaching itself to the altered silver iodide. Removal of the mercury image by heat validates this chemistry. The developing box was constructed to allow inspection of the image through a yellow glass window while it was being developed.
The next operation was to "fix" the photographic image permanently on the plate by dipping in a solution of
hyposulphite of soda – known as "fixer" or "hypo". The image produced by this method is so delicate it won't bear the slightest handling. Practically all daguerreotypes are protected from accidental damage by a glass-fronted case. It was discovered by experiment that treating the plate with heated
gold chloride both tones and strengthens the image, although it remains quite delicate and requires a well-sealed case to protect against touch as well as
oxidation of the fine silver deposits forming the blacks in the image. The best-preserved daguerreotypes dating from the nineteenth century are sealed in robust glass cases evacuated of air and filled with a chemically inert gas, typically
nitrogen.
Proliferation
Daguerreotype photography spread rapidly across the United States but not in the United Kingdom, where
Louis Daguerre controlled the practice with a patent.
Richard Beard, who bought the British patent from Miles Berry in 1841, closely controlled his investment, selling licenses throughout the country and prosecuting infringers.
In the early
1840s, the invention was introduced in a period of months to practitioners in the United States by
Samuel Morse, inventor of the
telegraph code. A flourishing market in
portraiture sprang up, predominantly the work of itinerant practitioners who traveled from town to town. For the first time in history, people could obtain an exact likeness of themselves or their loved ones for a modest cost, making portrait photographs extremely popular with those of modest means. Their wealthy counterparts continued to commission painted portraits by fine artists, considering the new photographic portraits inferior in much the same way their ancestors had viewed printed books as inferior to hand-scribed books centuries earlier. In some ways they were right, in other ways wrong; the vast bulk of 19th-century portrait photography effected by itinerant practitioners was of inferior artistic quality, yet the work of many portrait painters was of equally dubious artistic merit, and although photographic images were
monochrome, they offered a technical likeness of the sitter no portrait painter could achieve. The first
erotic photography and the first experimenters in stereo photography also utilized daguerreotypes.
This method spread to other parts of the world as well. In 1857,
Ichiki Shirō created the first known
Japanese photograph, a portrait of his
daimyo Shimazu Nariakira. This photograph was designated an "Important Cultural Property" by the
government of Japan.
The daguerreotype is commonly, erroneously, believed to have been the dominant photographic process into the late part of the 19th century in Europe. Evidence from the period proves it was only in widespread use for approximately a decade before being superseded by other processes:
- The calotype, introduced in 1841; a negative-positive process using a paper negative.
- The ambrotype, introduced in 1854; a negative image on glass, with a black paper backing.
- The tintype or ferrotype, introduced in 1856; a negative image on an opaque metal plate.
- The collodion process, introduced in 1851; a negative-positive process using silver salt impregnated collodion on a glass plate.
Demise
The intricate, complex, labor-intensive daguerreotype process itself helped contribute to the rapid move to the ambrotype and tintype. The resulting reduction in economy of scale made daguerreotypes expensive and not affordable for the average person. According to Mace (1999), the rigidity of these images stems more from the seriousness of the activity than a long exposure time, which he says was actually only a few seconds (
Early Photographs, p. 21). The daguerreotype's lack of a negative image from which multiple positive "prints" could be made was a limitation also shared by the tintype and ambrotype and wasn't a factor in the daguerreotype's demise until the introduction of the
calotype. Unlike film and paper photography however, a properly sealed daguerreotype can potentially last indefinitely.
Daguerreotype cameras are expensive. In May 2007, an anonymous buyer paid 588,613 euros (792,000 USD) for an original 1839 camera made by Susse Frères (Susse brothers), Paris, at an auction in Vienna, Austria, making it the world's oldest and most expensive commercial photographic apparatus.
The Daguerreotype's popularity wasn't threatened until photography was used to make imitation Daguerreotypes on glass positives called "
ambrotypes."-Meaning "imperishable picture" named by "Marcus A. Root.(Newhall, 107)
Living art
Some daguerreotypes—such as those by
Southworth & Hawes of
Boston, or
George S. Cook of
Charleston,
South Carolina—are considered masterpieces in the art of
photography. A daguerreotype of Edgar Allan Poe was featured on the
PBS show
Antiques Roadshow and appraised at US $30,000 to $50,000.
Daguerreotypy continues to be practiced by enthusiastic photographers to this day, although in much smaller numbers; there are thought to be fewer than 100 worldwide. Its appeal lies in the "magic mirror" effect of light reflected from the polished silver plate through the perfectly sharp silver image and in the sense of achievement derived from the dedication and hand-crafting required to make a daguerreotype.
The Daguerreobase
The
Daguerreobase is a database registration system (currently only available in Dutch) for daguerreotypes, developed by the Nederlands fotomuseum (
Rotterdam, The Netherlands). It can be used by conservators and researchers as well as viewed by those interested. Its aim is to disclose historic and technical information about the daguerreotype on a worldwide level. The project was initiated by
Hans de Herder, head of the conservation department of the Nederlands fotomuseum from its instigation in 1994 until 2005. It was further developed by Belgian photo conservator
Herman Maes, de Herder's successor,
Boudewijn Ridder and
Nickel van Duijvenboden.
Other uses
The Sporting News has periodically published a book called
Daguerreotypes, a collection of playing statistics about retired
Major League Baseball players who are either in the
Baseball Hall of Fame or are otherwise widely known among baseball historians. The book is structured in the same style as the annual
Baseball Register of active players.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Daguerreotype'.
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