Daguerreotype
One of the first practical photographic processes, publicly announced in 1839 and named for the French artist/inventor Louis Jacques Mande Daguerre. A light-sensitive coating on a silver-plated copper sheet produced brilliant and sharp images, which, when sealed under glass, have proven to be extremely permanent. Since daguerreotypes are autopostive, each one is unique
Featured Works
24
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
c. 1860
Death Portrait of a Woman Lying On a Bed of Patterned Mat...
Unidentified photographer
c. 1850
Jenny Lind
Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre
1840-51
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
c. 1860
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
c. 1840
Untitled
Southworth and Hawes
1850-59
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
c. 1860
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
c. 1850
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
c. 1850-55
Untitled
J. Gurney
1852-57
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
c. 1850
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
c. 1850
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
c. 1860
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
c. 1850
Untitled
J. Gurney
c. 1850
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
c. 1850
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
1859
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
c. 1850
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
c. 1840
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
late 1840s
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
c. 1850
Untitled
Antoine-Francois-Jean Claudet
1840s
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
1840s
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
c. 1860