A Brief History Of
Photography
By: Scott Michaels
For
centuries images have been projected onto surfaces.
The camera obscura and the camera lucida were used
by artists to trace scenes as early as the 16th
century. These early cameras did not fix an image in
time; they only projected what passed through an
opening in the wall of a darkened room onto a
surface. In effect, the entire room was turned into
a large pinhole camera. Indeed, the phrase camera
obscura literally means "darkened room," and it is
after these darkened rooms that all modern cameras
have been named.
The first photograph is considered to be an image
produced in 1826 by the French inventor Nicéphore
Niépce on a polished pewter plate covered with a
petroleum derivative called bitumen of Judea. It was
produced with a camera, and required an eight hour
exposure in bright sunshine. However this process
turned out to be a dead end and Niépce began
experimenting with silver compounds based on a
Johann Heinrich Schultz discovery in 1724 that a
silver and chalk mixture darkens when exposed to
light.
Niépce, in Chalon-sur-Saône, and the artist Louis
Daguerre, in Paris, refined the existing silver
process in a partnership. In 1833 Niépce died of a
stroke, leaving his notes to Daguerre. While he had
no scientific background, Daguerre made two pivotal
contributions to the process.
He discovered that by exposing the silver first to
iodine vapour, before exposure to light, and then to
mercury fumes after the photograph was taken, a
latent image could be formed and made visible. By
then bathing the plate in a salt bath the image
could be fixed.
In 1839 Daguerre announced that he had invented a
process using silver on a copper plate called the
Daguerreotype. A similar process is still used today
for Polaroids. The French government bought the
patent and immediately made it public domain.
Across the English Channel, William Fox Talbot had
earlier discovered another means to fix a silver
process image but had kept it secret. After reading
about Daguerre's invention Talbot refined his
process, so that it might be fast enough to take
photographs of people as Daguerre had done and by
1840 he had invented the calotype process.
He coated paper sheets with silver chloride to
create an intermediate negative image. Unlike a
daguerreotype a calotype negative could be used to
reproduce positive prints, like most chemical films
do today. Talbot patented this process which greatly
limited its adoption.
He spent the rest of his life in lawsuits defending
the patent until he gave up on photography
altogether. But later this process was refined by
George Eastman and is today the basic technology
used by chemical film cameras. Hippolyte Bayard also
developed a method of photography but delayed
announcing it, and so was not recognized as its
inventor.
In the darkroomIn 1851 Frederick Scott Archer
invented the collodion process. It was the process
used by Lewis Carroll.
Slovene Janez Puhar invented the technical procedure
for making photographs on glass in 1841. The
invention was recognized on July 17th 1852 in Paris
by the Académie Nationale Agricole, Manufacturière
et Commerciale.
The Daguerreotype proved popular in responding to
the demand for portraiture emerging from the middle
classes during the Industrial Revolution. This
demand, that could not be met in volume and in cost
by oil painting, may well have been the push for the
development of photography.
However daguerreotypes, while beautiful, were
fragile and difficult to copy. A single photograph
taken in a portrait studio could cost US$1000 in
2006 dollars. Photographers also encouraged chemists
to refine the process of making many copies cheaply,
which eventually led them back to Talbot's process.
Ultimately, the modern photographic process came
about from a series of refinements and improvements
in the first 20 years.
In 1884 George Eastman, of Rochester, New York,
developed dry gel on paper, or film, to replace the
photographic plate so that a photographer no longer
needed to carry boxes of plates and toxic chemicals
around. In July of 1888 Eastman's Kodak camera went
on the market with the slogan "You press the button,
we do the rest". Now anyone could take a photograph
and leave the complex parts of the process to
others. Photography became available for the
mass-market in 1901 with the introduction of Kodak
Brownie.
Since then color film has become standard, as well
as automatic focus and automatic exposure. Digital
recording of images is becoming increasingly common,
as digital cameras allow instant previews on LCD
screens and the resolution of top of the range
models has exceeded high quality 35mm film while
lower resolution models have become affordable. For
the enthusiast photographer processing black and
white film, little has changed since the
introduction of the 35mm film Leica camera in 1925.
About the Author
Antique photos are a vital part of any family
heirloom.
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