We hope this helps
you. So many times we look at an old photograph, and have no idea
of the treasure before our eye's. Maybe knowing some of the
history behind an old photograph will cause you to take a second
look, then find out about the people in the picture.
I can't tell you the number of times customers have come to me
with wooden crates of glass negatives to sell to me because they
think they are valuable, but they don't want them themselves.
No, they are not valuable to me, but to the family of the person
who took them....WOW!
When
I owned a photo lab, one customer came to me with several hundred
4X5 glass negatives. He asked me to print several examples, just so
he could see what he had purchased at an estate sale for a total of
$10.00. The family (estate) was selling all of grandpa's "junk",
since he had passed away. They were negatives of actors, actresses,
and film sets from the silent and not so silent film era of
Hollywood, shot on location all over the world. What a gold mine!
Hopefully, I have convinced many people to keep their family
treasures, and after they have them printed, identify the
individuals in the photographs. Just don't wait too long.
By determining the type of photographic technique used to
make your old family photos, it's possible to date, with reasonable
accuracy, the date the original was created.
Following are the most common photographic processes. With this
information, see if you can narrow down the age of the photograph.
DAGUERREOTYPE (1839 - 1870, approx.)
The case resembled a double frame. Very decorative. The photo image
is on a silver clad copper sheet which is attached to a sheet of
glass by a foil-like brass decorative frame. This sealed packet was
then force fit into a special wood case and was often padded with
velvet or silk. Many times, the silver image tarnishes with silver
sulfide in the same way as silverware. The cost: $5.00 (more than a
weeks pay for most people).
CALOTYPE (1845 - 1855, approx.).
The first photographs on paper. A two step process. The first step
was to make a negative image on a light sensitive paper. Step two
was to make a contact [print] with a second sheet of sensitized
paper to make a positive print. Calotypes were never widely popular,
and most of those surviving are in museums. Apparently Talbot (the
inventor) did not fully realize the importance of washing his prints
long enough to remove all the residual chemicals, or perhaps his
fixing was inadequate. Either fault leads to the same result: fading
image, discoloration, etc. These defects are now noticeable in many
calotypes, some of which are today little more than pale yellow
ghosts.
AMBROTYPE (1854 to the end of the Civil War)
The ambrotype is a thin negative image on glass made to appear as a
positive by showing it against a black background.
Similar to daguerreotype in assembly of parts: 1- Outer protective
case. 2- Backing of black paper, cloth, or metal. 3- The
on-glass-image, emulsion to the front and black varnish on the back.
4- Brass die cut frame 5- Gilt border of thin brass to edge wrap the
frame, glass, and backing.
It
was common for the ambrotype to be colored. Suggestions of rouge
cheeks or lips suggested a person of substance. Buttons, watch
chains, pendants, broaches were often tinted with color.
Disadvantages of ambrotypes: 1. A very slow (up to 20 sec.)
exposure, compared to 2 sec. for a daguerreotype. 2. The glass was
very fragile. It couldn't withstand travel or being carried in a
locket as a daguerreotype could.
Advantage of the Ambrotypes: Price. It could be sold profitably at a
low price, approx. 25 cents. The cost of the ambrotype was less than
half of the daguerreotype.
THE TINTYPE (1856 to W.W.II)
"The penny picture that elected a president".
Price- sold for a penny or less, making photography universally
available. The cost of an image at the time the process became
obsolete was about 25 cents.
Advantages: 1. Lighter and less costly to manufacture. 2. Camera was
lighter and easier to handle. 3. Wouldn't shatter as a glass image
photo would. 4. Could be colored or tinted.
As
the public sought lower prices, the cases (which cost more than the
finished photographs) were eliminated. In their place, paper folders
of the size of the then popular card photographs were used for
protection. Instead of a glass cover, the photographer covered the
tintype with a quick varnish to protect any tints or colors added to
cheeks, lips, jewelry or buttons.
Popularity: The tintype was very popular during the Civil War
because every soldier wanted to send a picture of himself with his
rifle and sword home. They could be mailed home safely without fear
of shattering.
The
tintype actually does not contain any tin, but is made of thin black
iron. It is sometimes confused with ambrotypes and daguerreotypes,
but is easily distinguishable from them by the fact that a tintype
attracts a small magnet.
DATING THE TINTYPES
Introduction 1856 - 1860. The earliest tintypes were on heavy metal
(0.017 inches thick) that was never again used. They are stamped
"Neff's Melainotype Pat 19 Feb 56" along one edge. Many are found in
gilt frames or in the leather or plastic (thermomolded) cases of the
earliest ambrotypes. Size range from one-sixth plate to full plate.
Civil War Period 1861 - 1865. Tintypes of this time
are primarily one-sixth and one-fourth plate and are often datable
by the Potter's Patent paper holders, adorned with patriotic stars
and emblems, that were introduced during the period. After 1863 the
paper holders were embossed rather than printed. Uncased tintypes
have been found with canceled tax stamps adhered to the backs. The
stamps date these photographs to the period of the Wartime Retail
Tax Act, 1 Sept. 1864 to 1 Aug. 1866.
Brown Period 1870 - 1885. In 1870 the Phoenix Plate
Co. began making plates with a chocolate-tinted surface. They
created a sensation among the photographers throughout the country,
and the pictures made on the chocolate-tinted surface soon became
the rage. During this period "rustic" photography also made its
debut with its painted backgrounds, fake stones, wood fences and
rural props. Neither the chocolate tint nor the rustic look are to
be found in pre 1870 tintypes.
Gem Period 1863 - 1890. Tiny portraits, 7/8 by 1
inch, or about the size of a small postage stamp, became available
with the invention of the Wing multiplying cameras. They were
popularized under the trade name Gem and the Gem Galleries offered
the tiny likeness at what proved to be the lowest prices in studio
history. Gem Galleries flourished until about 1890, at which time
the invention of roll film and family cameras made possible larger
images at modest cost. It was no longer necessary to visit a studio
that specialized in the tiny likeness. Gem portraits were commonly
stored in special albums with provision for a single portrait per
page. Slightly larger versions also existed. Some Gems were cut to
fit lockets, cufflinks, tie pins, rings and even garter clasps.
Carnival Period 1875 - 1930. Itinerant
photographers frequently brought the tintype to public gatherings,
such as fairs and carnivals. They came equipped with painted
backdrops of Niagara Falls, a beach, a boat, and other novelty props
for comic portraits.
Postmortems. In the nineteenth century it was common to request a
photographer to make a deathbed portrait of a loved one.
THE CABINET CARD (approx. 1866 - 1906).
A card stock product, nearly four times the size of previous
photographs on card stock.
The larger size created new problems of photographic quality. Flaws
that were not obvious in the smaller cards now became very visible.
This gave rise to a new skill of photo retoucher.
Success in retouching led to innovations in the darkroom and at the
camera. Diffusion of the image reduced the need for retouching. This
led to verbal skirmishes between photographers who insisted in
"truth in photography". Opponents called retouching degenerating,
demoralizing, and untruthful practices.
Cabinet cards can be further dated by color of stock, borders,
corners and size.
QUICK DATING GUIDE TO CABINET CARDS
The earliest American made cabinet cards have been dated only to the
post- Civil War period, beginning in 1866. Design and colors of
these cards followed those of the cards of that time. Cabinet cards
are rarely found after 1906.
Card Colors:
1866 - 1880 White card stock of a light weight.
1880 - 1890 Different colors for face and back of mounts.
1882 - 1888 Face of buff, matte finished, with a back of creamy
yellow, glossy.
Borders:
1866 - 1880 Red or gold rules, single and double lines.
1884 - 1885 Wide gold borders.
1885 - 1892 Gold beveled edges.
1889 - 1896 Rounded corner rule of single line.
1890 - 1892 Metallic green or gold impressed border.
1896 Impressed outer border, without color.
Corners:
1866 - 1880 Square, lightweight mount.
1880 - 1890 Square, heavy board with scalloped sides.
Photographs mounted on card stock.
The most popular mount sizes were:
Carte-de-visite 4 1/4" x 2 1/2"
Cabinet card 6 1/2" x 4 1/2"
Victoria 5" x 3 1/4"
Promenade 7" x 4"
Boudoir 8 1/2" x 5 1/4"
Imperial 9 7/8" x 6 7/8"
Panel 8 1/4" x 4"
Stereograph 3" x 7"
REVENUE STAMPS ARE A TOOL FOR DATING PHOTOGRAPHS
As part of the effort by the Congress to fund the Civil War, among a
number of taxes levied was an 1864 Act which provided that sellers
of photographs affix stamps at the time of sale to "photographs,
ambrotypes, daguerreotypes, or any sun pictures", according to the
following schedule, exempting photographs too small for the stamp to
be affixed:
Less than 25 cents: 2 cents stamps (blue/orange).
25 to 50 cents: 3 cents stamps (green).
50 cents to $1: 5 cents stamps (red).
More than $1: 5 cents for each additional dollar or fraction
thereof.
Stamps were applied from 1 Aug. 1864 to 1 Aug. 1866. Blue playing
card stamps are known to have been used in the summer of 1866 as
other stamps were unavailable as the levy came to an end. The stamp
was to be canceled by requiring that the seller cancel the stamp by
initializing and dating it in ink. The most rare of all of these
stamps is the one cent (red) "playing cards" and the most common is
the orange two cent "playing cards". Values for all of these stamps
appear in the Scott's Specialized Catalog of United States Stamps.
THE STEREOGRAPH (1849 - 1925).
"Parlor Travel" both educational and entertaining.
The stereograph is an almost identical side-by-side set of images of
a single scene, viewed simultaneously through an optical device held
to the eyes like a pair of binoculars. Each eye looks at a slightly
different image, and the fusion of the two images in the mind
creates the illusion of depth. Price: a few pennies.
Sizes of stereo cards and slides: The typical mass manufactured
stereo card of the period between the Civil War and WW I had a
standard dimension: 3 1/2" x 7". This is the size commonly found in
boxed sets. The earliest of these cards were made on slightly curved
mounts; later cards were made on slightly curved mounts that
permitted greater clarity when they were seen in the stereopticon
viewer. A number of photographers, working with larger field
cameras, created slightly larger cards of 4" x 7", 4 3/8" x 7" and 4
1/2" x 7". Until about 1873 the smaller sizes were sold at twenty
five cents per card and the larger "artistic" size for fifty cents.
Within a decade sets of twenty or more were made on printing
presses, not by a hand photo-graphic process. The on-glass slides, a
stereo form more popular in Europe than in America, were available
in two standard sizes, 45 x 107 mm and 6 x 13 cm. Both were smaller
than the standard card stereograph.
THE WET-PLATE PRINT (c.1853 - 1902).
"The photograph that opened the West". (A large contact print).
To identify the wet-plate negative, look for an uneven coating were
the syrupy colloidal base of the glass plate did not flow to the
very edges of the glass. Many of the plate edges reveal torn or
rippled emulsion and even the fingerprints of the darkroom
technician who handled it with wet fingers. Only occasionally is it
possible to determine whether a print was made from a wet-plate
negative, especially if the outer edge of the print has been trimmed
away. It is the edge that would immediately reveal the
irregularities of the coating prepared in the field.
Few Americans could afford the cost of a studio enlargement made
with a solar enlarger. The technique of making such enlargements
were so complicated that few photographers had the proper skill to
make an enlargement from a standard studio negative. Much of the
demand for larger photographs could be satisfied by making larger
negatives and larger cameras to handle them. Wet plate negatives
were often 11" x 14" up to 20" x 24" sheets of sensitized glass.
Wet-plate photographers helped to open the American West by taking
their cameras out of the studio and on location assignment with the
survey teams of the U.S. Government and the railroads in the Far
West, and with the geological expeditions moving into the unmapped
wilderness beyond the Rocky Mountains. The giant spaces they
discovered demanded giant cameras. The camera that documented the
famous meeting at Promontory Point, Utah of the tracks of the
Central Pacific and Union Pacific railroads on 10 May 1869 was built
to accommodate glass plates 10" x 13". The camera boated down the
Colorado River during the Powell Expedition into the Grand Canyon
was 11" x 14". The work of these photographers, shown in major
exhibitions in Washington D.C., is generally acknowledged to have
been instrumental in convincing Congress to enact legislation
establishing many of the major national parks, monuments, and
preserves. The maps of the surveys showed where everything was; the
wet-plate photographers showed precisely what was there.