- "Camera Obscura" used during Renaissance
- Permanent mirror predicted in science fiction (1700's)
- 1700's photo-reactive chemicals discovered
- Thomas Wedgwood experiments with silhouettes on china, cant make permanent
- 1827 Nicephore Niépce produces picture using material that hardens when exposed to light
(takes 8 hours of exposure) - Niépce dies, his partner, Louis Daguerre develops plates "daguerreotype" (only takes 1 1/2 hours to expose) and can make permanent by immersing in salt.
- By 1840, William Henry Fox Talbot invents "Calotype," Prints on paper instead of plates.
- 1848 Abel Niépce de Saint-Victor perfects negative process using emulsion on glass plates.
- 1851 Fredrick Scott Archer introduces "Collodion" process reduces exposure time down to 2-3 seconds, features positives, not negatives and requires wet processing. (Big carts)
- 1871 Dr. Richard Maddox uses gelatin emulsion, allows for "mass-produced" dry plates.
- 1884 John Carbutt and George Eastman use thin celluloid film for negatives, 1888 introduce "box" camera.
Monday, March 10, 2008
Notes; History of Photography Part I
Labels:
Photography
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