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A hand-coloured stereoscopic daguerreotype of an elderly woman, taken at the studio of Antoine Claudet (1797-1867). The woman is probably Claudet's mother or mother-in-law. In 1839, the Daguerreotype, invented by Louis Jacques Mande Daguerre, became the first photographic process to be announced to the public. A highly-polished silver surface on a copper plate was sensitised to light by exposing it to iodine fumes. After exposing the plate in a camera it was developed with mercury vapour. Daguerreotypes are unique images which may appear as a positive or negative depending on how light hits the surface. A stereograph is a pair of photographs which, when viewed through a stereoscope, give the appearance of three-dimensional depth.
Picture Reference: 10450990
Subject:
ENTERTAINMENT & MEDIA >
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Processes, Daguerreotype
Inventory No.: 1984-1645
Credit: NMeM
Keywords:
1780-1818, 1800s, 19th Century, Accessories, Antoine, Antoine Claudet, Apparatus, Belongings, Bonnet, Chair, Claudet, Antoine, Claudet, Clothing, Clothes, Communication, Communicating, Daguerreotype Photography, Daguerreotype, Early Photography, Elderly, England, Entertainment, Equipment, Europe, Female, French, Furniture, Headgear, Headwear, Industrial Revolution, Kingdom, Man-made, Man Made, Mass Media, Media, Mother-in-law, Old, People, Photograph, Photography, Photography: Equipment, Portrait, Processes, Daguerreotype, Ringlets, Seating, Society, Stereoscopic, Stereoscopes & Stereoscopic Ap, Stereoscope, The Arts, Uk, United, United Kingdom, Victorian, Woman, Woman's, Women, Women's
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