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Nouveau moyen de préparer la couche sensible des plaques destinées à recevoir les images photographiques / Lettre à M. Arago cover

Nouveau moyen de préparer la couche sensible des plaques destinées à recevoir les images photographiques / Lettre à M. Arago

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About This Book

A technical letter presents a refined method for preparing photosensitive metal plates, explaining how layered metallic iodides and thin deposits of mercury, gold and platinum produce galvanic effects that allow a thicker iodide coat and richer tonal gradations. It supplies practical reasoning, lists reagents and apparatus, and gives exact preparations and step-by-step operations for cleaning, polishing, bathing, heating, iodizing and fixing, with cautions about bromine exposure and the fragility of the gold layer. The account distinguishes a long, reusable preparatory sequence from a final iodizing step that should follow within about twelve hours.

About the Author

Daguerre, Louis Jacques Mandé portrait

Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre

Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre was a French artist and photographer, best known for his pioneering work in the development of photography. He is credited with the invention of the daguerreotype, the first practical method of capturing images on a light-sensitive surface. His notable work, "Nouveau moyen de préparer la couche sensible des plaques destinées à recevoir les images photographiques / Lettre à M. Arago," outlines his innovative techniques and contributions to the field. Daguerre's advancements not only transformed the art of photography but also laid the groundwork for future developments in visual representation.

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