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photography |
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photography![]() A daguerreotype of the Hiller family, made in about 1885. The daguerreotype produced a photographic image by using a thin sheet of silver-plated copper that had been treated to make the silver light-sensitive. An exposure took from 5 to 40 minutes, which accounts for the stern looks of many of the early sitters. Process for reproducing permanent images on light-sensitive materials by various forms of radiant energy, including visible light, ultraviolet, infrared, X-rays, atomic radiations, and electron beams. Photography was developed in the 19th century; among the pioneers were Louis Daguerre in France and William Henry Fox Talbot in the UK. Colour photography dates from the early 20th century. The most familiar photographic process depends upon the fact that certain silver compounds (called halides) are sensitive to light. A photographic film is coated with these compounds and, in a camera, is exposed to light. An image, or picture, of the scene before the camera is formed on the film because the silver halides become activated (light-altered) where light falls but not where light does not fall. The image is made visible by the process of developing, made permanent by fixing, and, finally, is usually printed on paper. Motion-picture photography uses a camera that exposes a roll of film to a rapid succession of views that, when developed, are projected in equally rapid succession to provide a moving image.
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31) While it can be argued that one of the attractive features of this early photography was that it was by famed and reputable photographers, the same cannot be said for the 120 views of Burma by Tripe. Daniel discusses Fenton's early photography in Russia and images taken in and around London, many of which were intended for viewing in a Wheat-stone reflecting stereograph, a format Fenton then abandoned to make large photographs designed for exhibition alongside prints, watercolors and paintings. Anton Holzer (Victors) complemented her view with his study on the mobility of early photography which traveled in the form of postcards all around the globe. |
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