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The Daguerreotype - Photographic Processes Series - Chapter 2 of 12 

George Eastman Museum
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The first commercially successful photographic process was announced in 1839, the result of over a decade of experimentation by Louis Daguerre and Nicéphore Niépce. Unfortunately, Niépce died before the daguerreotype process was realized, and is best known for his invention of the heliograph, the process by which the “first photograph” was made in 1826. Daguerreotypes are sharply defined, highly reflective, one-of-a-kind photographs on silver-coated copper plates, usually packaged behind glass and kept in protective cases. The daguerreotype process is demonstrated in this chapter.
This project is made possible by a grant from the U.S. Institute of Museum and Library Services, grant number MA-10-13-0194.

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11 дек 2014

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Комментарии : 108   
@PhilJonesIII
@PhilJonesIII 8 лет назад
I remember seeing my first strip of contacts develop. Seeing that image appear was a moment I will never forget. Must have been 10 or 11 in a tiny darkroom my dad built for me. How they felt back then when they created the first images ever must have been out of this world.
@fshoaps
@fshoaps Год назад
They must've felt like gods.
@gsjunkie4320
@gsjunkie4320 Год назад
So interesting even to this day. Back in the late 1990s I had the pleasure of participating in Eastman House historic process workshops. Daguerreotype, albumen, etc. To this day the images made during these workshops are among my most prized photographic possessions.
@journalgirrl
@journalgirrl 6 лет назад
This is the most understandable explanation of the daguerreotype process I've seen yet. Thank you!!
@nadined3576
@nadined3576 4 года назад
Louis Daguerre was a French painter who created 'Daguerreotypes', a process that gave portraits a sharp reflective style, like a mirror.
@tjat69
@tjat69 3 года назад
Now you’re totally stuck in the retro-zone. Sad-face
@emmy4002
@emmy4002 6 месяцев назад
Very good Victoria! The Daguerrian process brought out fine detail in people's faces making them extremely popular from the 1800s onward.
@MusicismoreImportant
@MusicismoreImportant 5 месяцев назад
​@@emmy40021837
@low-keyrighteous9575
@low-keyrighteous9575 3 года назад
This is so amazing . To be able to see a street from the 1840's is a rush . To see Robert Cornelius self portrait from 1839 is incredible . Such Incredibles minds with such a driven purpose :) learning about this stuff is so interesting . The entire process , learning of it and those who wanted to capture a moment in time is special .
@deniselipiansky1165
@deniselipiansky1165 2 года назад
I LOVE this video. I show it to my students in Digital Art during their photo editing unit so they know here photography comes from!
@jamesellsworth7535
@jamesellsworth7535 7 лет назад
louis daguerre was a french painter who created “daguerreotypes” a process that gave portraits a sharp reflective style, like a mirror
@lewisnorth1188
@lewisnorth1188 6 лет назад
Now you're totally stuck in the retro zone
@MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive
@MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive 6 лет назад
+Lewis Sad face
@IanJones942
@IanJones942 6 лет назад
Very good, Victoria!
@elise3455
@elise3455 4 года назад
I'm not into "capturing" your interest. That's kind of sick, isn't it?
@nadined3576
@nadined3576 4 года назад
Now, Max, since you've captured our interest and clearly want to join the conversation, can you please tell us the name of the process that gave birth to the first self-portraits?
@songbirdt.6113
@songbirdt.6113 7 лет назад
Thank you so much for this series. Who knew!! It is amazing to listen to the details of early photography!1
@DAiken-jz1iu
@DAiken-jz1iu 4 года назад
Photos were a lot work. Thank God these were done.
@artsandcraftscreations3492
@artsandcraftscreations3492 8 лет назад
Excellent video and an excellent series..... wish they were just a bit longer!
@goognamgoognw6637
@goognamgoognw6637 6 лет назад
Thank you Louis Daguerre from France who invented photography.
@isabellen4406
@isabellen4406 7 лет назад
Thank you for this amazing video :)
@catman8670
@catman8670 2 года назад
A fabulous discovery ❤️
@cedericocosantorini8013
@cedericocosantorini8013 3 года назад
France gave birth to countless inventions, researchers and pionneers. Question is: how did you get possession of those unique pieces that should belong to a French museum?
@emmmily98
@emmmily98 3 года назад
Watched this for my honors English class. Pretty cool.
@photographedemode
@photographedemode 7 лет назад
Largest collection of Daguerreotypes in the world and they are all stored???? They should be on display for people to see them.
@jude999
@jude999 9 месяцев назад
Would love to see some Grant Romer! His lecture, on RU-vid, in Atlanta some 10 years ago was a throwback to the 19th century Lyceum---fabulous! How anyone figured this out in the beginning is beyond my comprehension.
@PhilJonesIII
@PhilJonesIII 8 лет назад
Of course developing images in warm mercury vapour was not without hazard.
@sya117
@sya117 3 года назад
amazing
@RicarteRivera
@RicarteRivera Год назад
Incredible
@fuzzyapplepie6940
@fuzzyapplepie6940 4 года назад
Just came to watch this to escape the retro zone. Sad face.
@735645060
@735645060 9 лет назад
this is so cool
@scottmatheson2390
@scottmatheson2390 4 года назад
Daguerreotypes have a "steampunk" feeling about them to me. It is certainly a process that belongs in the 19th century, a time that seems like a blend of science,magic and adventure. They are also very beautiful in a way in which modern photography seems almost completely lacking.
@tomSmith-cw8pj
@tomSmith-cw8pj 8 лет назад
very interesting
@justcuz2105
@justcuz2105 7 лет назад
who would've thought that a game would get me to learn history
@speedyrax4506
@speedyrax4506 4 года назад
YOU CAME HERE AFTER STARTING LIFE IS STRANGE?
@stonent
@stonent 8 лет назад
Brought to you by Aperture Science.
@sarahalves3899
@sarahalves3899 3 года назад
SOOO COOL
@michaelmcgee8543
@michaelmcgee8543 6 лет назад
Photography makes me feel alive ,the same way that gambling make others feel alive.
@Moonwizard420
@Moonwizard420 7 лет назад
Man, Life is Strange.
@WikiSorcerer
@WikiSorcerer 5 лет назад
Hella strange.
@Alhapra
@Alhapra 5 лет назад
Shaka brah
@Accelerator26
@Accelerator26 5 лет назад
Wowser
@lucutes2936
@lucutes2936 3 года назад
wat
@nadined3576
@nadined3576 4 года назад
I want to be friends with everybody who made a Life is strange reference here XD
@grahambarlow1308
@grahambarlow1308 27 дней назад
Fox Talbot was doing the same in Britain with a similar type of photography , and there are huge collections available of his plates. They are still finding the glass plates to this day on gardens , people using them as plant cloches! with wonderful negatives still in tackt. I believe his process was similar to Daguerreotypes. It shows you the jealousy that existed in France!
@paulnicholson1906
@paulnicholson1906 18 дней назад
The reason the Daguerreotype wasn't available in England was that Parliament refused to sign an agreement with him like the French government did to sign over the patent rights so they had to pay royalties for it. It wasn't jealousy on the French part just business.
@pchic7860
@pchic7860 4 года назад
I just found two of these frames at a garage sale
@putalaweamala7191
@putalaweamala7191 3 года назад
Uh :(, I'm here because I wanted to learn about this.... I wonder what would have happened if photography had been invented earlier? We would have photos from the regency era, from the independence of the Spanish colonies in Latin America.... We would know how historical characters really looked like, we could see people in their daily lives, seeing how they really were... it would be fascinating to have these inventions before, thanks to Nicephore and Daguerre, and many other people who collaborated in the invention of photography, we can enjoy the photos.
@melancholictofuthiing
@melancholictofuthiing 4 года назад
i wanna meme this video up
@markcortino5438
@markcortino5438 5 лет назад
Read the NEW book HISTORICAL HEADSTONES due out late October, 2018. It contains a new unknown image of louis Daguerre c.1839 & William Valentine who studied under him! You WILL be glad you did!
@KickinTodlrs
@KickinTodlrs 3 года назад
Max & Chloe Deguerreotype plz
@michaelmcgee8543
@michaelmcgee8543 6 лет назад
George Eastman website is having problems with their servers.At this moment it won't up laod
@jhonatanbarrerabarduk5411
@jhonatanbarrerabarduk5411 Год назад
It's incredible that amount of views on this video, no million views and are billions smart phones with camera's now.
@localbod
@localbod 16 дней назад
I have read what you wrote three times and I still don't understand what you mean.
@kwitchabichen
@kwitchabichen 4 года назад
Was their a method that required egg whites to preserve the image? I have been searching the internet for something i thought i had heard in art class decades ago.
@shuttlefeather
@shuttlefeather 4 года назад
Photographic paper was made using egg whites called "albumen". Search "albumen print". It was a joint effort between the photographers and the chickens
@AnnaNguyen42
@AnnaNguyen42 3 года назад
@@shuttlefeather lol I had to reread the last sentence 🤣
@mariahzalera2123
@mariahzalera2123 6 месяцев назад
i still dont get how it works .
@JBaryq
@JBaryq 8 лет назад
2:11 is that an actual photography/daguerreotype? if so what is this place?
@Jerbod2
@Jerbod2 8 лет назад
no its a painting.
@augustebenson2464
@augustebenson2464 6 лет назад
No it's not a painting, it's an engraving or a pastel on paper photographed !
@purplexs2506
@purplexs2506 2 года назад
If one were to find a Daguerreotype photographer, what sort of price would you expect to pay for a modern, commissioned portrait, say 8" squarish?
@peterrenn6341
@peterrenn6341 5 месяцев назад
8” square is huge for a daguerreotype. The work and time polishing goes up exponentially. Chuck Close and Jerry Spagnoli are about the only people I can think of who might work that big. The man to ask re costs is Mike Robinson (seen in this video). It won’t be cheap…
@robynzellar3510
@robynzellar3510 3 года назад
Love your videos. I wish the elephant head was not used as the example...I show these videos to my high school students, but not this one...it's too horrific. I remember going to the Eastman House as a kid and being haunted by the animals...especially the elephants. If you ever decided to edit this I would be so grateful! Just a thought...
@GeorgeEastmanMuseum
@GeorgeEastmanMuseum 3 года назад
Hi Robyn, there are no plans to update these videos at the moment. George Eastman, was a big game hunter. He went to Africa twice to photograph, film, and hunt big game. This was typical of wealthy men of his time, like Theodore Roosevelt and others. As curators and historians, our job is to tell the story of our historic sites as accurately as possible, and not to gloss over or rewrite its history. However, you should also know that the elephant in his Conservatory is a reproduction of the original one he hung there; it is made of fiberglass, wood, and paint.
@robynzellar3510
@robynzellar3510 3 года назад
@@GeorgeEastmanMuseum I thought that looked fake! That is so good to know. I understand that we should not gloss over history, but this video is about a photographic process, not George Eastman. Anyway, thanks for your response--makes me feel better to show it to my students (I run an elephant NGO as well). I love these videos--thanks so much for making them. All the best. :-)
@ThePhreakass
@ThePhreakass 8 лет назад
Mr Jefferson brought me here after being in the darkroom
@lewisnorth1188
@lewisnorth1188 7 лет назад
ThePhreakass this is what I was hoping to find in the comments
@ZacabebOTG
@ZacabebOTG 7 лет назад
ThePhreakass Wowsers.
@goognamgoognw6637
@goognamgoognw6637 6 лет назад
who gives a rat what brought you here, dumbed down smart phone generation !
@sk-oq3nu
@sk-oq3nu 5 лет назад
@@goognamgoognw6637 awwww...bayotgagobogoinutilinatayka
@nadined3576
@nadined3576 4 года назад
Me too XD
@angelgarciahdz3768
@angelgarciahdz3768 7 лет назад
¡¡¡ algunos de sus empleados NO usan Guantes !!!
@patrickgalvaing2105
@patrickgalvaing2105 3 года назад
"except England" that is because Daguerre had started another approach with the Royal society in London
@tonywhite383
@tonywhite383 2 года назад
So, it was ok in Scotland?
@nicktamer4969
@nicktamer4969 2 года назад
Il s'est passé quoi au juste entre Daguerre et les Anglais ? Merci.
@jckhammer
@jckhammer 2 года назад
@@tonywhite383 well Scotland is not england
@peterrenn6341
@peterrenn6341 5 месяцев назад
Kinda.. Daguerre had already done a patent licence deal with Richard Beard
@lucutes2936
@lucutes2936 3 года назад
now we can easily take photos with our phones
@paulnicholson1906
@paulnicholson1906 18 дней назад
and they get lost in oblivion most likely. Almost similar to letters vs emails. I have all the letters I received from my grandfather from years ago. Emails are not archived that way and are lost to time.
@patrickgorski9550
@patrickgorski9550 5 лет назад
CMN 396 woot
@rebekahjcowan
@rebekahjcowan 4 года назад
The elephant head is fake, right?
@davestelling
@davestelling 8 месяцев назад
Yes. Reproduction...
@alancosta8633
@alancosta8633 5 лет назад
0:38 someone knows who is the black woman?
@meldeebueno
@meldeebueno 6 лет назад
John Mulaney
@po0mfy-kun566
@po0mfy-kun566 5 лет назад
i came from dr. stone
@Accelerator26
@Accelerator26 5 лет назад
too bad I came from Life is Strange
@readthetype
@readthetype Год назад
I wonder what % of Portland hipsters already have a Daguerreotype of themselves?
@Jbuttafoucault
@Jbuttafoucault 2 года назад
How many times can you talk about Walter Benjamin's concept of the aura without actually mentioning the word "aura?"
@AtakanArisoy
@AtakanArisoy 3 года назад
2:25 Actually he's not Daguerre. He's a Turkish singer, Ibrahim Tatlises. search google, thank me later.
@irisheyesofbelfast
@irisheyesofbelfast 2 года назад
No, it is Daguerre and not even similar to Tatlises.
@patrickgalvaing2105
@patrickgalvaing2105 3 года назад
largest collection stored in a closet, yu got to be kidding, quelle honte pourquoi ne pas l'exposer???
@JJONNYREPP
@JJONNYREPP 7 месяцев назад
The Daguerreotype - Photographic Processes Series - Chapter 2 of 12 0551am 5.1.24 i can feel the ire and angst of the digitally hyperactive, as they seek to comprehend the facts of the matter - of some dude taking all that time and effort to create a fuzzy or blurred or hazy or patchy daguerreotype image. ummmmmmmm, anti english sentiments went into promoting that process. perhaps the english or british had suggested the idea was their own as said idea was eaten up by the Europeans...?................. as much as coming down the hill to contemplate the idea of this process appeals. the hermit refuses to pay the french man's stinking toll.
@peterrenn6341
@peterrenn6341 5 месяцев назад
What???
@JJONNYREPP
@JJONNYREPP 5 месяцев назад
​@@peterrenn6341 ???
@joelp.719
@joelp.719 3 года назад
pas de liberté pour l'Angleterre, car Daguerre avant de vendre son procédé au gouvernement français, avait déjà conclu un accord avec les Anglais pour reproduire son invention.
@matteo_possamai
@matteo_possamai 10 месяцев назад
😂
@AmerAlHiyasat
@AmerAlHiyasat 9 лет назад
1:12 That's Putin!
@ceciliavite3071
@ceciliavite3071 4 года назад
🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡
@RascalKyng
@RascalKyng 4 года назад
Screw England I guess... Pay up. ..
@peterrenn6341
@peterrenn6341 5 месяцев назад
Not quite, though it’s easy to get to that idea. Actually Daguerre was honouring a previous licensing deal he’d already made with the Englishman Richard Beard.
@paulnicholson1906
@paulnicholson1906 18 дней назад
@@peterrenn6341 also Parliament wouldn't do a similar deal as the French government would.
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