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; Portrait of a Child; Ambrotype; Portrait of a Child; Ambrotype; Portrait of Feliciana Yndart; Ambrotype ... By the summer of 1855 the ambrotype was fast becoming the most popular form of photography among Americans, preferred even over the daguerreotype. The popularity of the medium was owed to the absence of the...
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imsc.usc.edu/haptics/LostandFound/terms_ambrotype.html
imsc.usc.edu/haptics/LostandFound/terms_ambrotype.html
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This is the principle behind the Ambrotype process, the pictures being more correctly known as Collodion positives. ... The Ambrotype process was yet another method of reducing the cost of photography. It became popular for a number of reasons:
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www.rleggat.com/photohistory/history/ambrotyp.htm
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The ambrotype is actually a glass negative that, backed with a dark material, appears to be a positive. ... On the right is a 1/4 plate ambrotype by Mathew Brady. It is housed in a "flip case" where the image can be viewed from either side with the brown velvet on the inside of the covers serving as the dark backing.
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brightbytes.com/collection/ambrotypes.html
brightbytes.com/collection/ambrotypes.html
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Discover the history of 19th c. Ambrotype Photographs. ... ; c. 1850-60`s Identified Ambrotype Photograph of Grandmother Henderson; "Mother`s Grandmother Henderson" handwritten in old dip pen ink on paper inside case. Found in Upstate New York, near Livingston, Ontario and Monroe Counties NY.
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ancestorville.com/ambrotypephotographs.html
ancestorville.com/ambrotypephotographs.html
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Antique Photography - Daguerreotype - Ambrotype - Early Photography - Old Photographs - Daguerreotypes - Fritz Antiques - Kathy's Antique Photography - Your online stop shop for antiques, collectibles, folk art, fishing & hunting, sporting collectibles, ... Ruby Ambrotype ;
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fritzantiques3.homestead.com/FRITZANTIQUES3.html
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The ambrotype process is a photographic process that creates a positive photographic image on a sheet of glass using the wet plate collodion process. It was invented by Frederick Scott Archer in the early 1850s, then patented in 1854 by James Ambrose Cutting of Boston, in the United States.
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photocritic.org/ambrotype-photography/
photocritic.org/ambrotype-photography/
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The Daguerreian Society, dedicated to the art, history and science of the daguerreotype. Features galleries, extensive resources, and information about the Society ... Whether you're here just to browse around and look at images or whether you're already passionate about early photography, ... collectors and dealers...
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The ambrotype (1851-1890s) is a thin negative image on glass made to appear as a positive by showing it against a black background. The reverse of the glass plate was either painted black or backed with a black material.
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www.knaw.nl/ecpa/photo/proces08.htm
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English: The ambrotype process (from Greek ambrotos, "immortal") is a photographic process invented in the mid-1850s by Frederick Scott Archer. The process creates a glass negative, which appears as a positive when placed against a black background.
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commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Ambrotype
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Ambrotype
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