Yahoo Groups archive

Digital BW, The Print

Index last updated: 2026-04-28 22:56 UTC

Thread

175 years of photography

175 years of photography

2014-01-03 by billdlewis

January 1839 Daguerreotype Announced in Paris 

One hundred seventy-five years ago, in January 1839, members of the Academy of Sciences in Paris were shown a unique photographic process that literally changed the world as we see it. The inventor, Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre, called his discovery the "daguerreotype." It was the first commercially successful form of photography. 

Later that year, a British inventor, William Henry Fox Talbot, announced his calotype process, making 1839 the year photography was popularized. Some controversies regarding who was first ensued. Daguerre did not claim a patent in France but gave the French government the rights to the process as a gift "free to the world," although an agent later filed a patent in England on Daguerre's behalf. As can be imagined, the early history of photography was rife with similar designs, claims to fame and compensation, and many other related intrigues that go hand-in-hand with an invention of such universal significance. 

Bill Lewis

Re: 175 years of photography

2014-01-04 by Ben Schneider

Joseph Niepce did the first photographic images in 1825.  So the year 2000 was the 175th. Anniversary, making this 184 years.  He wasn't as public with his discovery.

Sent from my iPad

Re: 175 years of photography

2014-01-04 by jlkrysan

For a fascinating account of this topic see "Capturing the Light" by historians Roger Watson and Helen Rappaport (St. Martins Press, New York. 2013.) Loaded with facts, it is a page turner.
Jim

--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, Ben Schneider <benjschneider2@...> wrote:
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>
> Joseph Niepce did the first photographic images in 1825.  So the year 2000 was the 175th. Anniversary, making this 184 years.  He wasn't as public with his discovery.
> 
> Sent from my iPad
>

Move to quarantaine

This moves the raw source file on disk only. The archive index is not changed automatically, so you still need to run a manual refresh afterward.