This article considers the daguerreotype and electricity as the key driving forces in the early histories of photography and photomechanical reproduction. Drawing on three examples – daguerreotype electrotypes, galvanically etched daguerreotypes and the etching process developed by Hippolyte Fizeau – the article aims to demonstrate how closely they were connected and how much interest they raised among scientists and photographers in the early 1840s, particularly in France, Britain and the German-speaking countries. The article shows in what ways the three processes were employed and who developed and used them, which institutions and learned societies were involved in their progress and which theoretical concepts and discussions they gave ...
Nineteenth-century photography is usually thought of in terms of ‘black and white’ images, but inten...
From the very start of photography and the invention of the daguerreotype in 1839, the search for "r...
A landmark publication that catalogues the history and development of the printed image Gutenberg's ...
Industrial improvements to silver plating through the work of electroplating firms such as Elkington...
The refinement of photomechanical techniques, which would ally photography to publishing and solve t...
The daguerreotype was named after the French artist and chemist Louis J.M. Daguerre who, in collabor...
Published on the 150th anniversary of the invention of photography and the 20th anniversary of the A...
A general objective of this paper is to investigate the original juncture of photography (the daguer...
When photography appeared shortly before 1840, the metal-plate daguerreotype, invented in France, wa...
A physico‐chemical elucidation of the first photographic technology that allowed manifold reproducti...
The world of film has gotten increasingly complex in part because of the technology being developed ...
Between 1843 and 1914, photography became the main means of illustrating stories in the French press...
1800- Thomas Wedgwood (1771-1805) produces "sun pictures " by placing opaque objects on le...
Throughout the nineteenth century the astonishing technical success of electricity had a great impac...
This paper traces the origins of photography as a visual genre. It goes ahead to discuss the introdu...
Nineteenth-century photography is usually thought of in terms of ‘black and white’ images, but inten...
From the very start of photography and the invention of the daguerreotype in 1839, the search for "r...
A landmark publication that catalogues the history and development of the printed image Gutenberg's ...
Industrial improvements to silver plating through the work of electroplating firms such as Elkington...
The refinement of photomechanical techniques, which would ally photography to publishing and solve t...
The daguerreotype was named after the French artist and chemist Louis J.M. Daguerre who, in collabor...
Published on the 150th anniversary of the invention of photography and the 20th anniversary of the A...
A general objective of this paper is to investigate the original juncture of photography (the daguer...
When photography appeared shortly before 1840, the metal-plate daguerreotype, invented in France, wa...
A physico‐chemical elucidation of the first photographic technology that allowed manifold reproducti...
The world of film has gotten increasingly complex in part because of the technology being developed ...
Between 1843 and 1914, photography became the main means of illustrating stories in the French press...
1800- Thomas Wedgwood (1771-1805) produces "sun pictures " by placing opaque objects on le...
Throughout the nineteenth century the astonishing technical success of electricity had a great impac...
This paper traces the origins of photography as a visual genre. It goes ahead to discuss the introdu...
Nineteenth-century photography is usually thought of in terms of ‘black and white’ images, but inten...
From the very start of photography and the invention of the daguerreotype in 1839, the search for "r...
A landmark publication that catalogues the history and development of the printed image Gutenberg's ...