Ambrotypes and Tintypes
In my last History of Photography article, I talked about the wet plate, or collodion process and how it was quickly adopted as the status
In my last History of Photography article, I talked about the wet plate, or collodion process and how it was quickly adopted as the status
After Talbot introduced the calotype (see my previous article here), the world was in search of something photographic in between the calotype’s unique paper characteristics
In my last history of photography article, I talked about William Henry Fox Talbot, the inventor of the Calotype. Here, I want to explore how
William Henry Fox Talbot was an English scientist and scholar in the early 1800’s. Although he was a contemporary of Daguerre, his contributions to photography
Lasting Impacts of the Daguerreotype In the past few articles of this series, we’ve seen how the daguerreotype came about but we haven’t really taken
As is often the case with history, it seems that time moves slowly until it explodes in a flurry of invention and then seemingly all
The history of photography is vast and fascinating. It didn’t develop like other art forms and comparatively, photography is in its’ infancy. Looking at where