Oldest Photograph Ever taken

Google+ this Post

A Bit Controversial, but "That's My Story and I'm Sticking To It".

Who took the first lightfast photograph? Well as far as I'm concerned it was Henry Fox Talbot. He achieved the first lightfast photo. Lightfast is the ability of any photograph, in this case, to be able to hold the image, be it black and white or color, in the presence of light. All attempts before Mssr Talbot failed to be lightfast. In other words, they faded away. Henry's lasted. 
Here is his 1835 positive of  
  Latticed window at lacock abbey





Rough Crude and Full of Noise

 Obviously this was not in focus. His whole purpose was to develop the technology titled Calotype, or Talbotype, which ending outflanking the technology known as Daguerreotype in that era in causing prints to last. This is really where hanging prints on a wall or placing them in frames all started.  He used silver iodide, instead of silver chloride in the photogenic drawing process and silver nitrate and gallic acid in the development process. Not very interesting stuff today, but in that time it was latest tech news available. And he was not the most photogenic man.



But he did make his process stick. And for that we all have Mr Talbot to thank for all the pictures we are taking today because without him our photos might well not be able to last. Think not? Here's a quote from Wikipedia: Talbot claimed experiments beginning in early 1834, when Louis Daguerre in 1839 exhibited his pictures taken by the sun. After Daguerre's discovery was announced, without details, Talbot showed his three-and-a-half-year-old pictures at the Royal Institution on 25 January 1839. Got any other suggestions? Toss em in the Comments Box please and thanks for any you'd like to share. 

My website if you care to view 






Add a Comment Below






Comments

Popular posts from this blog

From Dull to Dramatic Photography

The Service this Art Site Offers is the Very Best for Art Buyers

Shooting Christmas Can be Fun.......or........

Soft Proofing in Photoshop

Do you ever shoot for free?

Happy Mother's Day Mom

The Fix for Copy & Paste Issues between Apple Devices

Two very special prints at Fort Vancouver NHS a National Park

New Years: A time to Defrag your Hard Disk Drive