"most viewed this week on the years"
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photo Felice Beato Until the mid-20th century, the majority of photography was monochrome (black and white), as was first exemplified ...
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An ambrotype is a weak negative image on glass rendered positive by the addition of a dark background. Frederick Scott Archer, an Engl...
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Silver is a common component of most historical photographic processes. Silver mirroring is a natural deterioration, inherent within silver-...
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!click the title! The mid-nineteenth century saw the simultaneous birth of couture, photography, and modern art. For women of the Italia...
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Daguerreotypes, ambrotypes and early tintypes were usually sold in small folding cases. The cases were designed to keep the fragile surfaces...
Me: I am modern day alchimist practicing photographic process of the 19th Century and the handcraft
last year
Red light district
"When he died, 89 glass-plate negatives were found in his desk showing prostitutes taken in around 1912 in ‘Storyville‘ the red ...
about me "work and lifestyle"
- CABARET øf SPIRITS
- ~ *~ It all starts as a photographer... the path leads me to specialized in the conservation & application of fine art and historic photographs and restoration of paper ... working in my Boudoir, CABARETøf SPIRITS ~ *~
Archive you missed the past months
Showing posts with label MUSEUM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MUSEUM. Show all posts
Friday, 28 December 2018
come back ... In my Flemish mysticism.
Etichette:
art,
closed for holiday,
Logbook,
ME,
misticismo,
MUSEUM,
pastisserie
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Bruges, Belgio
Tuesday, 11 September 2018
Saracen birthday ... tiny fragments. of a mystical diary.
Etichette:
ME,
MUSEUM,
my husband,
my ISLAMIC,
my Orientalism,
pastisserie,
saints
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90015 Cefalù PA, Italia
Tuesday, 5 June 2018
Monday, 12 February 2018
Bringing back to Glory Mr.Wolcott's.Closed in a glass bell
On October 6th 1839, the firm of Alexander Wolcott & John Johnson commenced working on the daguerreotype process announced in August of that year, and on the 7th of October, 1839 they were able to produce a portrait daguerreotype. Wolcott & Johnson have claimed to be the first to produce a life portrait, however, it is unclear if this honor belongs to Wolcott, Morse or Draper.
In March 1840, with the aid of a new invention referred to as the mirror camera, Wilcott opened, which may have been the world's first portrait studio.
William S. Johnson who was John Johnsons father, traveled to England marketing the Wolcott & Johnson photographic camera. An English entrepreneur Richard Beard, had secured the only license for making Daguerreotypes in London from Daguerre and he agreed to jointly secured the Wolcott & Johnson camera patent for Britain with Mr. Wolcott, which was recorded on June 14th 1840. Beard then opened the first portrait studio in England.
In 1842 wolcott discovered a combination of chemicals, known in London as Wolcott's mixture which reduced sitting time and was very sensitive to the action of light.
In 1844, Alexander Simon Wilcott died leaving behind a pioneering accomplishment as the very first American to secure a patent in the field of photography and open a portrait studio.
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Wolcott's an ingenious New Yorker, patent model for a daguerreotype camera with
concave reflector. It was the first U.S. patent for a photographic invention.
The camera is approximately one fifth the size of the working version and is the only complete model
of the Wolcott camera known to exist. (PATENT No.1,582, May 8, 1840)
Etichette:
camera,
DAGUERREOTYPES,
gallery,
historical photography,
MUSEUM,
pastisserie,
TALBOT
Tuesday, 16 January 2018
Morning work in afternoon thermal bath
Etichette:
ARCHIVE,
at table,
BATH,
budapest,
camera,
laboratorio,
ME,
MUSEUM,
paper,
SILVER print
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