According to this it is time to rewrite the history books
http://www.bjp-online.com/british-jo...-history-write
According to this it is time to rewrite the history books
http://www.bjp-online.com/british-jo...-history-write
Very interesting–thank you!
I wouldn't make too much of this until Norsigian proves that they were actually taken by Niepce in 1827...
I'm not sure why this is a history rewrite; the Niepce story is well known, no?
When I was 16 I thought my father the stupidest man in the world; when I reached 21, I was astounded by how much he had learned in just 5 years!
-appropriated from Mark Twain
I agree that Niepce is no stranger and that nothing going on here is really that mysterious.
The way that Niepce's photos are important is that they just go to highlight, yet again, that like all inventions, the better invention gets all the credit. Because we find out that he did something a year or two before Daguerre doesn't automatically make Dags unimportant.
It doesn't make Niepce's photos unimportant as art objects but as a technological advance, Daguerre is more important. Daguerreotype's are fundamentally different from the very painterly photos of Niepce. Dags stand alone as a new thing and not just a new version of the old thing which is what pictorial photos are. The importance of the ultra clarity, forthrightness and honesty of Dags can not be stressed enough.
Niepce does not get credit for inventing the television and digital cameras. He made some beautiful photos and that's more than enough as far as I'm concerned. I hope that someone is looking at my photos 170 years from now.
Cheers all. Steven
The way I learned it was -- LOTS of people were doing photography of sorts, but the Daguerreotype process was the first commercially successful system to be used.
What's strange about this is that all the histories I've read, including very old ones, mark 1826 as the year Niepce first made permanent photographic images. Not sure what they're claiming as a big discovery ... maybe it's a portfolio that's never surfaced before. But 1827 isn't news.
Here's his first known photograph taken from nature, in 1826.
I don't know about lots of people, but there may well have been a few. Niepce made the first image that didn't quickly fade. Daguerre made the first commercially viable process, with William Henry Fox Talbot right on his heels.
Let's not leave out poor old Hippolyte Bayard yet again...
"I love my Verito lens, but I always have to sharpen everything in Photoshop..."
That is news, why don't you guys just read the articleA pewter plate with a deposit of light-solidified material which resembles the resin obtained when heating lavender oil, which helped the plate accept the image."
The plate is the first and only known example of this process.
ok need to go back to the history books, but I thought the lavender oil thing was known for quite a while.
"In the field of observation chance favours the prepared mind" -- Pasteur
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