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What Was the First Commercial Photography Process?

Posted on the 12 June 2020 by Govind Vijayakumar @govindvkumar

As a photographer, it is good to know little about the history of the first commercial photography process. It will help you to get an idea of how and when the commercial photography process began.

Daguerreotype- The First Commercial Photography Process

The daguerreotype photography process is the first commercial photography process.

Louis Jacques Mande Daguerre

Louis Jacques Mande Daguerre- Inventor of First Commercial Photography Process

It was invented by Louis Jacques Mande Dagger.

It was Joseph Nicephore Niepce, who managed to capture an image with a camera first. But, it took several hours to capture the image, and the technique was a crude one.

Louis Daguerre was a painter initially who entered into a partnership with Nicephore Niepce.

Daguerreotype first commercial photography process

Daguerre initially used silver plates along with iodine vapor for the image formation in the plate. But, the image formation was not clear and visible to human eyes.

But, later he got the exact technique for image reproduction through an accident.

He placed one of the plates after the exposure of light into the cupboards for cleaning. Later, when he opened the cupboard after some hours, he found that the image was properly developed in the plate. 

He investigated it and came to know that the mercury vapor has resulted in this proper image formation. Thus, this accident became the pathway for one of the most important discoveries in the history of cameras.

Daguerreotype Cameras

Daguerreotype camera

So, the first commercial photography camera was the Daguerreotype camera. So, let us see how it looks.

It consists of two boxes, the rear part, and the front part.

The front part contains the lens and the rear apart with the ground glass slider.

He started manufactured these cameras from June 1839 through one of his relatives, Alphonse Giroux.

They have sent these cameras to many parts of the world. But, only a few were in proper working conditions after reaching their destinations. The rest of the cameras failed to work correctly. It may be due to the damages incurred during shipment.

Unlike our latest digital cameras, these were pretty large. The length was around 10.5 inches in the closed condition, with a width of 14.5 inches and a height of 12.25 inches. In the extended condition, the length will get double to almost 20 inches. 

He used plates of size 6.5 x 8.5 inches. It was priced around 16 pounds at that time.

This camera model was used for the next 10-12 years. Later, it got replaced by the lighter version cameras which used the compact bellows.

Issues with Daguerreotype Cameras

You can always expect some issues with the Daguerreotype cameras. There is nothing strange in that since it is the first commercial photography camera in the market.

In this camera, the image will be in the reverse format, if you use the camera directly. But, this issue was fixed later with the use of reversing prism or mirror in front.

Another drawback is that you directly get a positive image on the plate. So the final image cannot be transferred to the paper.

Later, many others modified the original daguerreotype camera to fix many of these issues.

Conclusion

So, now you know, who invented the first commercial photography process and how it happened. 


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