The
photography process was perfected and made commercially available around
1837. During the first 50 or 60 years of photography, photos looked very
different– very different from each other, and definitely very different than
they look today.
Identifying the TYPE of photograph you have can give you
an excellent clue into the date it was taken, which in turn can give you other
clues and information about the photo. You can find more detailed
information at {PhotoTree}, but I’ll outline the basics here to help you
identify 19th century family photos. (photo cred: my father-in-law, from
his own family history!)
DAGUERROTYPES
The
earliest photos were daguerrotypes. Images were printed on
mirror-polished, silver-plated copper. The image was sharp and shiny and
appeared to be floating. It was only viewable at an angle, a little bit
like a negative.
Daguerrotypes are always encased as there are many
layers– including a mat and glass –to create this type of photo, which is
essentially a mirror with an image on it. The average size for a
daguerrotype was 2 5/8″ x 3 1/4″. Daguerrotypes first appeared in 1839
and were most popular between 1842-1856. By about 1860, they were no longer
in use.
AMBROTYPES
Ambrotypes
were a great improvement over daguerrotypes because they didn’t have to be
viewed at an angle, and they didn’t tarnish, either. The images were
simply easier to see.
Ambrotypes were sharp images on silvered glass and
appeared to have a kind of depth to them, but they could be easily smudged by
touching or cleaning. Like a daguerrotype, the average size for an
ambrotype was 2 5/8″ x 3 1/4″. The shortest-lived type of photograph,
ambrotypes first appeared in 1854 and were most popular between
1855-1861. By about 1865, they were no longer in use.
TINTYPES
If
you’ve got an old family photo that you can attach a magnet to, you’ve got a
tintype. With a tintype, images were made on a blackened iron plate– a
thin sheet of iron. Some tintypes were encased in paper sleeves, but many
of those sleeves have not survived time.
Tintypes were a very popular
type of photograph because the price of photographs was dropping and people
could afford to have more photos taken. Many Civil War era photos are
tintypes. Tintypes (which aren’t actually tin) first appeared in 1856
and were most popular between 1860-1870. Around 1870, tintypes were also
available in “chocolate,” a distinctive brown hue. Although they fell out
of general popularity by about 1878, tintypes were still produced well past
1900 because they were used as novelty items at fairs, carnivals, and beach
resorts.
CARTE DE VISITES (CDVs)
Carte
de visites or CDVs were the first type of photos to be developed from a
negative. Images were first printed on thin paper and then attached to a
stiff card stock paper. The carte de visite changed photography!
Prices were still coming down, so photography was more accessible, but in addition,
CDVs were the first opportunity people had to order multiple copies of one
photo.
Prior to the carte de visite, one image could be printed once– on
a mirror, on glass, or on iron. With the creation of a negative, it was
now possible to get multiple copies to share. Carte de visites ushered in
the family photo album, too! Thinner pictures and more of them meant you
could collect pictures of family members.
If
you’re trying to identify this type of photo, look for a border around the
edges and studio background and props. Most CDVs are a sepia
tone. Carte de visites first appeared in 1859 and were most popular
between 1860-1880. By the 1890s, they were not used as much.
CABINET CARDS
The
cabinet card enjoyed as much longevity as the carte de visite, but cabinet
cards are distinguishable by their bigger size and by artwork and print right
on the card. The print is often the name of the photographer or the
location, which can help in dating the photo. By the 1880s, the quality
of cameras and papers for printing had improved, and many cabinet cards of the
1880s and 1890s look like artwork. Some even have scalloped edges.
Cabinet cards first appeared in 1866 and were most popular between
1874-1900. Their popularity waned in the early 1900s.
Once you learn the type of photo you’re looking at, you can narrow down or approximate a date.
Once you learn the type of photo you’re looking at, you can narrow down or approximate a date.
Now that you know how to date 19th century photos, let's talk about how to preserve them!
Making a digital version of treasures like this is a
great way to preserve it for the future. Scanning is the most common method of
preserving a photo because it creates the sharpest and clearest image, but
taking a picture of your old photo is another option.
For a 4×6 size
photo, scanning at 300 dpi is common, but if you want to enlarge the photo, or
if the original is smaller than 4×6, scanning at 600 dpi (or even 1200 dpi) is
recommended.
Scanners are readily available these days as part of an
all-in-one printer, but if you don’t have a scanner, your local photo
processing store (Walgreens, Target, Walmart, etc.) often has scanners
available to use right there at the store. Or get white-glove service by {using the Forever Box for your scanning}--just click "digitize" at the top at that link.
Once
your old photos are scanned, use them– share them. Having a digital copy is good, but having a
hard copy that you can see and enjoy is so much better! Telling a family history or
family story in a storybook like I’ve done here is a great way to share,
and knowing family stories has {so many rewards}! Family stories help us know we
belong. Knowing how our ancestors overcame their own hard times gives us
courage and strength to overcome our own.
I love this "My Heritage" book I made a while back. My uncle is a photographer, and since my grandma died he has become the family historian in charge of photos. He scanned these wonderful photos of my ancestors and I preserved them for myself in this book along with a little paragraph about each one. What I love about that is that I will never OWN these photos, but because of scanning and digital sharing, I can have them still. I also love that housing them in a storybook means that my kids can touch them! If I had those original 150-year-old pictures, I wouldn't let them be touched! This is a user-friendly, kid-friendly way to see the faces of my family, including people I've never met!
Storybooks
aren’t the only way to share the old family photos you’ve preserved. One
of my personal favorites is this family tree canvas. It helps put names with faces in a
simple and beautiful way.
Remember that once you've dated and digitized (scanned) these precious family photos, it's most important to now be able to SEE them! Whatever your method, be sure to display, preserve, and share these family treasures in a high-quality, meaningful way. {Here are my recommendations.}
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This
post was first published on July 21, 2017, at www.livegrowgive.org
by Jennifer Wise.
More #familyhistoryfriday posts can be found by clicking the hashtag next to Labels below.
Interesting info, good to know! Thanks so much for linking up with me at A Themed Linkup 46 for Photos and Videos. Shared!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, Dee. Yes, I thought this was fascinating and could be quite helpful. Thanks for visiting and sharing!
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