Photoshopping in the 1800s
- Tero
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Photoshopping in the 1800s
http://www.lincolncollection.org/discov ... %E2%80%9D/
I know if you had a negative you could do a lot of stuff. But did they had negatives of just glass plates?
I know if you had a negative you could do a lot of stuff. But did they had negatives of just glass plates?
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Re: Photoshopping in the 1800s
Glass plates were the only thing that could survive the film emulsion then, at least the only workable thing, gold doing a good job but a bit pricey.Tero wrote:http://www.lincolncollection.org/discov ... %E2%80%9D/
I know if you had a negative you could do a lot of stuff. But did they had negatives of just glass plates?
They found a green house that was using hundreds of Matthew Brady glass negatives in its construction. The plates were discarded after Brady went bankrupt after the war. Some of them were saved, but most had gong beyond use.
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Re: Photoshopping in the 1800s
But yet we have some useful pictures as old as..when in the 1800s?
International disaster, gonna be a blaster
Gonna rearrange our lives
International disaster, send for the master
Don't wait to see the white of his eyes
International disaster, international disaster
Price of silver droppin' so do yer Christmas shopping
Before you lose the chance to score (Pembroke)
Gonna rearrange our lives
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Don't wait to see the white of his eyes
International disaster, international disaster
Price of silver droppin' so do yer Christmas shopping
Before you lose the chance to score (Pembroke)
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Re: Photoshopping in the 1800s
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_o ... technologyTero wrote:But yet we have some useful pictures as old as..when in the 1800s?
1822 – Nicéphore Niépce takes the first fixed, permanent photograph, of an engraving of Pope Pius VII, using a non-lens contact-printing "heliographic process", but it was destroyed later; the earliest surviving example is from 1825.[1]
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Re: Photoshopping in the 1800s
It looks to me like the image has just been 'dodged' in the darkroom.
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Re: Photoshopping in the 1800s
Of course, in those days, it took a while to expose a plate, so there might have been options to move someone into or out of shot during the exposure.
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Re: Photoshopping in the 1800s
You could wave your hand around a certain area, or use a "lollipop" to fade a spot. You could use a mask to bring out spots. I've done this in darkroom-equipped caravan.Thinking Aloud wrote:Of course, in those days, it took a while to expose a plate, so there might have been options to move someone into or out of shot during the exposure.
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Re: Photoshopping in the 1800s
That sounds the most plausible.Thinking Aloud wrote:Of course, in those days, it took a while to expose a plate, so there might have been options to move someone into or out of shot during the exposure.
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Re: Photoshopping in the 1800s
Double exposure would work for the OP. Plus Mary Todd Lincoln was a spiritualist, holding seances to try to contact her dead son, and then also her dead husband. People would take advantage of her. And she was a marketable item after she died, of course.
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Re: Photoshopping in the 1800s
If the picture was after 1870, the gelatin based film was available. It looks like staged activity in the picture, not during development. But then she would have known about it. Who knows.
International disaster, gonna be a blaster
Gonna rearrange our lives
International disaster, send for the master
Don't wait to see the white of his eyes
International disaster, international disaster
Price of silver droppin' so do yer Christmas shopping
Before you lose the chance to score (Pembroke)
Gonna rearrange our lives
International disaster, send for the master
Don't wait to see the white of his eyes
International disaster, international disaster
Price of silver droppin' so do yer Christmas shopping
Before you lose the chance to score (Pembroke)
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Re: Photoshopping in the 1800s
After a quick perusal I'd say they put a picture of Abe behind her briefly (light shined on it for a brief period during exposure?) and sketched in the rest somehow. You could put cut-out on the paper during the exposure to wash those places out.Tero wrote:If the picture was after 1870, the gelatin based film was available. It looks like staged activity in the picture, not during development. But then she would have known about it. Who knows.
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