Industrial improvements to silver plating through the work of electroplating firms such as Elkington, Mason and Co are an important part of our industrial heritage, bridging art, science and industry to form a significant portion of museum collections. However, the impact of this development of silverplating technology upon photography has not previously been explored. This article details the improvements that electroplated silver brought to the daguerreotype photographic process and to the manufacture of daguerreotype plates in Birmingham, offering a material reappraisal of the inventive qualities of the daguerreotype within a wider narrative of industrial manufacture. Chemists in 1840s Birmingham were developing photographic technique...
A physico‐chemical elucidation of the first photographic technology that allowed manifold reproducti...
Published to accompany the re-opening of the V&A Cast Courts on 27 November 2018, this book reveals ...
This article explores the legal conditions for the production of daguerreotype photography in the UK...
This article considers the daguerreotype and electricity as the key driving forces in the early hist...
When photography appeared shortly before 1840, the metal-plate daguerreotype, invented in France, wa...
When and where was photography invented? Received knowledge tells us that a few European men of dist...
In the second half of the 19th century silver photographs were made on various materials. Paper, tex...
This presentation outlines my new research project, which will investigate practices of technical in...
During the nineteenth century jobbing printers in Britain played an important role in the history of...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
The daguerreotype was named after the French artist and chemist Louis J.M. Daguerre who, in collabor...
This article looks at the Silvern Series, a set of photographs of items from the South Kensington Mu...
Illustrated price catalogues were published and distributed during the second half of the nineteenth...
The paper negative calotype process introduced by Fox Talbot in 1840 proved to be the conceptual bas...
1800- Thomas Wedgwood (1771-1805) produces "sun pictures " by placing opaque objects on le...
A physico‐chemical elucidation of the first photographic technology that allowed manifold reproducti...
Published to accompany the re-opening of the V&A Cast Courts on 27 November 2018, this book reveals ...
This article explores the legal conditions for the production of daguerreotype photography in the UK...
This article considers the daguerreotype and electricity as the key driving forces in the early hist...
When photography appeared shortly before 1840, the metal-plate daguerreotype, invented in France, wa...
When and where was photography invented? Received knowledge tells us that a few European men of dist...
In the second half of the 19th century silver photographs were made on various materials. Paper, tex...
This presentation outlines my new research project, which will investigate practices of technical in...
During the nineteenth century jobbing printers in Britain played an important role in the history of...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
The daguerreotype was named after the French artist and chemist Louis J.M. Daguerre who, in collabor...
This article looks at the Silvern Series, a set of photographs of items from the South Kensington Mu...
Illustrated price catalogues were published and distributed during the second half of the nineteenth...
The paper negative calotype process introduced by Fox Talbot in 1840 proved to be the conceptual bas...
1800- Thomas Wedgwood (1771-1805) produces "sun pictures " by placing opaque objects on le...
A physico‐chemical elucidation of the first photographic technology that allowed manifold reproducti...
Published to accompany the re-opening of the V&A Cast Courts on 27 November 2018, this book reveals ...
This article explores the legal conditions for the production of daguerreotype photography in the UK...