Portrait of Leo Adler, Wisconsin, 1860
01
Artifact Overview
The daguerreotype, popular in the early 1840s-late 1850s, was the first form of photography available to the public. Sheets of silver-plated copper--polished to a mirror finish--were bathed in photosensitive vapors, and exposed in cameras. In formal studios and traveling booths, photographers created affordable portraits. For the first time, people saw their likenesses--fixed permanently in time and place.
Artifact Details
Artifact
Daguerreotype (Photograph)
Date Made
1860
Subject Date
1860
Collection Title
Location
Not on exhibit to the public.
Object ID
94.114.2
Credit
From the Collections of The Henry Ford.
Material
Copper (Metal)
Silver (Metal)
Japan (Enamel)
Wood (Plant material)
Papier mâché
Glass (Material)
Mat (Cased photograph)
Preservers
Brass (Alloy)
Lining (Material)
Velvet (Fabric weave)
Technique
Daguerreotype (Process)
Plating (Metal coating)
Hand coloring
Embossing (Technique)
Sixth plate
Color
Black-and-white (Colors)
Red
Dimensions
Height: 3.625 in
Width: 3.188 in
Depth: 0.75 in
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