Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Daguerreotype> ?p ?o }
- Daguerreotype abstract "Daguerreotype (/dəˈɡɛrəˌtaɪp, -roʊ-, -riə-, -rioʊ-/; French: daguerréotype) process, or daguerreotypy, was the first publicly announced photographic process, and for nearly twenty years, it was the one most commonly used. It was invented by Louis-Jaques-Mandé Daguerre and introduced worldwide in 1839. By 1860, new processes which were less expensive and produced more easily viewed images had almost completely replaced it. During the past few decades, there has been a small-scale revival of daguerreotypy among photographers interested in making artistic use of early photographic processes.To make a daguerreotype, the daguerreotypist would polish a sheet of silver-plated copper to a mirror finish; treat it with fumes that made its surface light-sensitive; expose it in a camera for as long as was judged to be necessary, which could be as little as a few seconds for brightly sunlit subjects or much longer with less intense lighting; make the resulting latent image on it visible by fuming it with mercury vapor; remove its sensitivity to light by liquid chemical treatment; rinse and dry it; then seal the easily marred result behind glass in a protective enclosure.Viewing a daguerreotype is unlike looking at any other type of photograph. The image does not sit on the surface of the metal, but appears to be floating in space, and the illusion of reality, especially with examples that are sharp and well exposed is unique to the process.The image is on a mirror-like silver surface, normally kept under glass, and will appear either positive or negative, depending on the angle at which it is viewed, how it is lit and whether a light or dark background is being reflected in the metal. The darkest areas of the image are simply bare silver; lighter areas have a microscopically fine light-scattering texture. The surface is very delicate, and even the lightest wiping can permanently scuff it. Some tarnish around the edges is normal, and any treatment to remove it should be done only by a specialized conservator.Several types of antique photographs, most often ambrotypes and tintypes, but sometimes even old prints on paper, are very commonly misidentified as daguerreotypes, especially if they are in the small, ornamented cases in which daguerreotypes made in the US and UK were usually housed. The name \"daguerreotype\" correctly refers only to one very specific image type and medium, the product of a process that was in wide use only from the early 1840s to the late 1850s.".
- Daguerreotype thumbnail Louis_Daguerre_2.jpg?width=300.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageExternalLink P8400004_GODDARD_LIT_GAZETTE_1840-12-12.pdf.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageExternalLink platesizes.php.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageExternalLink bpt6k56753837.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageExternalLink dagdag.html.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageExternalLink www.americandaguerreotypes.com.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageExternalLink 1350.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageExternalLink www.cdags.org.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageExternalLink www.daguerre.org.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageExternalLink www.daguerreotypearchive.org.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageExternalLink giroux.htm.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageExternalLink daguerreotype.html.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageExternalLink early-photography-daguerreotypes.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageID "103177".
- Daguerreotype wikiPageLength "71069".
- Daguerreotype wikiPageOutDegree "184".
- Daguerreotype wikiPageRevisionID "704244377".
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Abraham_Bogardus.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Abraham_Lincoln.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Académie_des_Beaux-Arts.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Adam_Fuss.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Adolphe_Duperly.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Albert_Southworth.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Albertus_Magnus.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Albumen_print.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Amalgam_(chemistry).
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Ambrotype.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Andrew_Jackson.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink André-Adolphe-Eugène_Disdéri.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Angelo_Sala.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Antoine_Claudet.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Art_of_Europe.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Wellesley,_1st_Duke_of_Wellington.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Asphalt.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Augustus_Washington.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Australia.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Bromine.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Calotype.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Camera_lens.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Camera_obscura.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Carbon_black.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Category:1837_introductions.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Category:19th_century_in_art.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Category:Alternative_photographic_processes.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Category:Black_and_white_photography.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mercury_(element).
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Category:Photographic_processes_dating_from_the_19th_century.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Category:World_Digital_Library_related.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Chemist.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink China.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Chlorine.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Chuck_Close.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Conservator-restorer.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Daguerreobase.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Daimyo.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Daniele_Barbaro.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Dark_slide_(photography).
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Diaphragm_(optics).
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Diorama.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Edmond_Becquerel.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Electroplating.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Engraving.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Exposure_(photography).
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Ezra_Greenleaf_Weld.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink F-number.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink File:AdvSplendidDaguerreotypeAmerOfficeWaterburyCTCirca1840s.jpg.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink File:Boulevard_du_Temple_by_Daguerre.jpg.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Fireplace_mantel.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink France.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink François_Arago.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink François_Fleischbein.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink French_Academy_of_Sciences.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Gold_chloride.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Goldau.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Government_of_France.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Government_of_Japan.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Ground_glass.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Gum_arabic.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Halogen.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Heliography.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Henry_Fox_Talbot.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Hippolyte_Fizeau.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Asian_art.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Holography.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Humphry_Davy.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Ichiki_Shirō.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Important_Cultural_Property_(Japan).
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Iodine.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Iran.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Iron(III)_oxide.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink J._Paul_Getty_Museum.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink James_Presley_Ball.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Japan.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Jean-Baptiste_Dumas.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Jeremiah_Gurney.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Jerry_Spagnoli.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Johann_Baptist_Isenring.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink Johann_Heinrich_Schulze.
- Daguerreotype wikiPageWikiLink John_Adams_Whipple.