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The New Art,---We saw the other day, in Chilton's, in Broadway, a very curious specimen of the new mode, recently invented by Daguerre in Paris, of taking on copper the exact resemblances of scenes and living objects, through the medium of sun's rays reflected in a camera obscura. The scene embraces a part of St. Paul's church, and the surrounding shrubbery and houses, with a corner of the Astor House, and for aught we know, Stetson looking out of a window, telling a joke about Davie Crockett. All this is represented on a small piece of copper equal in size to a miniature painting.
--New York Morning Herald, September 30, 1839
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| Samuel Morse's Daguerreotype Camera |
The first camera's required a lengthy exposure time lasting many minutes. By the 1840s various optical means had reduced the exposure time to three or at most five minutes, and by the end of the decade to a matter of seconds. Daguerreotypists learned that their plates were more sensitive in dry weather than in damp, and that just before a thunderstorm their exposures were the shortest. Until cameras were equipped with a mirror to correct the error, daguerrean images remained reversed from right to left.The photograph above is Samuel Morse's Daguerreotype Camera
Morse meets Daguerre (1:19) RealAudio
While in Paris in 1838 to secure a French patent for the telegraph, Samuel Morse heard about Daguerre and his wonderful pictures. Listen how he brought the technology of the Daguerreotype to America.
Two types of Daguerreotypists (1:36) RealAudio
There were different approaches to this new art. Find out how environment helped to shape both the content and commerce related to Daguerreotypes.