Colored photographs can use light-sensitive paper {calotype} {talbotype} to make negative print and then positive print.
Black-and-white photography improved {daguerreotype}.
Collodion plates can have gelatin coatings {dry collodion process}.
color-film type {kinemacolor}.
Film {microfilm}| can have high-resolution and record pages.
Photographers can make two pictures, one for each eye. Instruments {stereoscope}| can have two separate eyepieces through which to view the pictures, to give three-dimensional views.
Photographs can be tin etchings {tintype}.
Photographs in wet colloids used bulky plates and big cameras {wet collodion process}.
He lived 1813 to 1857 and used wet collodion process.
He lived 1823 to 1896. His Civil War photographs used dry collodion process.
He lived 1830 to 1904. His action photographs used dry collodion process.
He lived 1849 to 1914 and photographed slums.
He lived 1864 to 1946.
He lived 1868 to 1952 and took still and moving American-Indian pictures.
He lived 1879 to 1973.
She lived 1904 to 1971 and took farm-worker photographs.
He lived 1898 to 1995.
He lived 1902 to 1984 and took nature photographs.
She lived 1895 to 1965 and took farm-worker photographs.
She lived 1898 to 1991, took portraits, and photographed New York City scenes.
He lived 1667 to 1741 and introduced color plates.
He lived 1765 to 1833 and invented photography. Light darkens silver chloride or silver bromide, and then sodium hypochlorite fixes it.
He lived 1787 to 1851 and invented daguerreotype.
He lived 1812 to 1889 and invented microfilm.
He lived 1800 to 1877 and invented calotype.
He lived 1824 to 1870 and invented dry collodion process. Process became efficient later [1871].
He invented tintype.
He lived 1854 to 1932 and invented roll film and cameras.
He invented kinemacolor.
He invented color travelogues. Technicolor came from it [1935], requiring only one exposure.
Outline of Knowledge Database Home Page
Description of Outline of Knowledge Database
Date Modified: 2022.0225