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(Clicking on the illustrations will load a larger image with the original captions.)
The following text is from Photo-Era, The American Journal of Photography, (Boston) Vol. 29, No. 3 (September 1912) pg. 101-105.
The Daguerreotype
Sadakichi Hartmann
A DAGUERREOTYPE!--There it lies in its case among old papers, letters
and curios. A frail encasement of wood covered with black embossed
paper. We cannot resist the temptation to open it and glance at it.
The clasp is loose; the old case almost falls apart. A weird tapestry-
effect on the inside of the lid greets our eye, and opposite it is a
gray blurred image set in a gilded frame with an oval or circular
opening.
What a strange effect. this silvery glimmer and mirror-like sheen!
Held towards the light, all substance seems to vanish from the picture;
the highlights grow darker than the shadows, and the image of some
gentleman in a stock or some lady in bonnet and puffed sleeves appears
like a ghostlike vision. Yet, as soon as it is moved away from the
light and contemplated from a certain angle, the image reappears, the
mere shadow of a countenance comes to life again. |
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The following comments appear in the same issue under the caption "Our Illustrations" / Edited by Wilfred A. French (page 140):
Daguerreotypes left to us are interesting because of the quaintness and charm of the costumes of the period--so far as the women are concerned; the men call for no sympathetic consideration. Some of the daguerreotypes have been copied quite successfully, the result depending upon the condition of the picture and the technical skill of the copyist.
The daguerreotype of Niagara Falls, made in 1850, is singularly interesting, in that both of the couples shown in the foreground were on their bridal tours and each gave to the other one of the daguerreotypes. The owner of the original of our production values it at $50.00
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