
Making a Daguerreotype — The First Practical Photograph, Drawn in Silver and Mercury
In 1839 Louis Daguerre announced a way to fix the fleeting image of the camera obscura permanently onto a metal plate, and the world suddenly had photography. A daguerreotype is unlike a modern photo: it is a single, unrepeatable image formed in a film of silver on a mirror-polished plate, so sharp and detailed that nothing matched it for decades.
The method is pure chemistry and patience. A silver-faced plate is fumed with iodine to make a light-sensitive skin of silver iodide, exposed in a camera for minutes, then developed by holding it over a dish of warm mercury — whose vapour clings to exactly the spots that light has struck, building the picture. A bath of hyposulphite of soda dissolves away the unexposed silver so the image stops reacting to light.
The results were miraculous and the process was perilous: mercury vapour is a potent poison, and many early photographers paid for their art with their health. Each daguerreotype is also unique — there is no negative — which is why every surviving one is a singular object. It is the chemical bridge between the camera obscura and all photography that followed.
Hazardous content
ប្លង់នេះមាននីតិវិធីគ្រោះថ្នាក់។ សូមចូលប្រើ និងបើកមាតិកាគ្រោះថ្នាក់នៅក្នុងការកំណត់គណនីរបស់អ្នកដើម្បីមើលការណែនាំជាជំហាន។
ប្លង់ពាក់ព័ន្ធ
ប្លង់ទាំងនេះចែករំលែកចំណេះដឹង — បច្ចេកទេស សម្ភារៈ ឬគោលការណ៍
CC0 សាធារណៈ
ប្លង់នេះត្រូវបានចេញផ្សាយក្រោម CC0។ អ្នកមានសិទ្ធិចម្លង កែប្រែ ចែកចាយ និងប្រើប្រាស់ដោយមិនចាំបាច់សុំអនុញ្ញាត។
គាំទ្រអ្នកបង្កើតដោយទិញផលិតផលតាមរយៈប្លង់របស់ពួកគេ ដែលពួកគេទទួលបាន កម្រៃជើងសារអ្នកបង្កើត កំណត់ដោយអ្នកលក់ ឬបង្កើតកំណែថ្មីនៃប្លង់នេះ ហើយបញ្ចូលជាការតភ្ជាប់ក្នុងប្លង់របស់អ្នកដើម្បីចែករំលែកចំណូល។