daguerreotype in English

noun
1
a photograph taken by an early photographic process employing an iodine-sensitized silvered plate and mercury vapor.
This exhibition includes 115 photographs, negatives and daguerreotypes by Fox Talbot, one of the 19th-century founders of the photographic medium, and several of his contemporaries.

Use "daguerreotype" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "daguerreotype" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "daguerreotype", or refer to the context using the word "daguerreotype" in the English Dictionary.

1. This kind of photo was called a Daguerreotype.

2. Daguerreotype Achromat 2.9/64 Art Lens - Nikon F Mount

3. The inventor of the daguerreotype is a French artist.

4. These ideas led to the famous Daguerreotype.

5. The Daguerreotype Achromat is directly inspired by the world’s first photographic optic lens – a 19th century invention created for the Daguerreotype camera by Charles Chevalier

6. What I ended up with was a colorized version of this Daguerreotype.

7. The Daguerreotype will be able to repay almost endless attention.

8. By 18 there were over 70 daguerreotype studios in New York City alone.

9. French artist and inventor of the daguerreotype process for obtaining positive photographic prints.

10. These developments made the Daguerreotype redundant and the process very soon disappeared.

11. Daguerre:French artist and inventor of the Daguerreotype process for obtaining positive photographic prints.

12. Daguerre: French artist and inventor of the daguerreotype process for obtaining positive photographic prints.

13. The image was taken by Louis Daguerre who invented the Daguerreotype – one of the earliest methods of photography.

14. The French government purchased the rights to the daguerreotype and released it free to the world.

15. The only way to reproduce a daguerreotype was to photograph them again which made them rare and priceless.

16. The Daguerreotype was the Polaroid of the day, producing a single image which was not reproducible (unlike the Talbot process).

17. Because the daguerreotype is much more fickle and dangerous to work with, there are fewer artists making daguerreotypes.

18. Ninth plate daguerreotype seated portrait of a uniformed militia corporal posed with Black plumed shako on the table next to him

19. Daguerreotype Achromat photos, from where this lens is coming from? Let’s start saying something about this lens: the Daguerreotype Achromat is a re-proposition of the original lens made by Charles Chevalier in the begin of the ‘800 century to be used on the first camera Obscura that was using the Daguerre’s photographic process.

20. A slightly more advanced version of the daguerreotype called the Calotype process that makes multiple copies possible using the negative and positive method became available very soon after.

21. Daguerre announced the latest perfection of the Daguerreotype, after years of experimentation, in 18 with the French Academy of Sciences announcing the process on January 9 of that year.

22. Lomography is seeking funds in its latest Kickstarter campaign for a Daguerreotype Achromat F2.9 to F16 65mm Art Lens, a recreation of the first photographic optic lens from 1839

23. Get a free filter with your Lens as long as stock lasts! The Daguerreotype Achromat is a 64mm manual art lens for Nikon F mount D/SLRs

24. In 1850, two Americans – astronomer William Cranch Bond and photographer John Adams Whipple – produced the first photograph of a star when they made a daguerreotype of Vega (also known as Alpha Lyrae).

25. In 1839 the daguerreotype was introduced to America, ushering in the age of photography, and within a generation the new invention put an end to the popularity of painted portraits.

26. Small bodies Brutalization define hypothesis of masses. The baule are not the daguerreotype, thus presenting tone and lasts a long history of art, unlike natural objects, short of the linear mass density strin a physical quantity, or pressure p, toh, thecoordinate of the.