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Daguerreotype:
Period of Use: 1839 - ca. 1860
   

The daguerreotype was the earliest practical photographic process, and was especially suited to portraiture. 

It was made by exposing the image on a sensitized silver-plated sheet of copper, and as a result, the surface of a daguerreotype is highly reflective. 

There is no negative used in this process, and the image is almost always reversed left to right. Sometimes a mirror inside the camera was used to correct this reversal.


Daguerreotypes were produced in a variety of sizes: 

(The sixth plate is the most common)

Double Whole Plate 
Whole Plate 
Half Plate 
Quarter Plate 
Sixth Plate 
Eighth Plate 
Sixteenth Plate 
 
 

 

8 1/2” x 13”
6 1/2” x 8 1/2”
4 1/4” x 6 1/2”
3 1/4” x 4 1/4”
2 3/4” x 3 1/4” 
2 1/8” x 3 1/4” 
1 5/8” x 2 1/8” 

Examples of Daguerreotypes:
 
  Portrait of Mauma Mollie : Monticello, Florida     Bird's eye view : Key West, Florida

 

Introduction | Daguerreotype | Ambrotype | Tintype | Glass Negatives | Salt Prints | Crayon Portraits | Cyanotypes | Albumen Prints | Stereoview | Lantern Slides | Nitrocellulose Film | Safety Film | Polyester | Digital

 

 

 

 

 

 


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