Alternative color exposure and printing processes

Carol Liston

    Research output: Chapter in Book / Conference PaperChapter

    Abstract

    From the very start of photography and the invention of the daguerreotype in 1839, the search for "realistic" color began. Daguerre even stated that the only feature needed to finish his revolutionary invention was naturalistic color. Alexander-Edmond Becquerel, is considered by many historians to be the founding father of color photography for achieving natural, albeit impermanent, color direct positive Daguerreotypes in 1848. In 1850, a daguerreotypist and minister, Levi L. Hill, of rural New York, made some Daguerreotypes, also known as hillotypes, that produced different colors on one image, but his process, which he called heliocromy, was complex, dangerous, and not necessarily "naturalistic".
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationNew Dimensions in Photo Processes : a Step-by-Step Manual in Alternative Photography
    EditorsLaura Blacklow
    Place of PublicationThe Netherlands
    PublisherFocal Press
    Pages264-276
    Number of pages13
    Edition4th ed.
    ISBN (Print)9780240807898
    Publication statusPublished - 2007

    Keywords

    • photography
    • color photography
    • history
    • color

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