The invention of Photography is subject to some debate. Joseph Nicephore Niepce(1765-1833) created the first photograph on a glass plate using a camera obscura in 1826. His associate Louis Daguerre(1787-1851) invented the worlds first widely used photographic process, known as the Daguerreotype in 1839.
At the same time in England, William Fox Talbot (1800-1877) was attempting to create a permanent record of an image, he announced his calotype process in 1841. The English claim to have truly invented photography since Fox Talbots's was the first negative-positive process from which any number of prints could be made.
William Fox Talbot did not invent the first camera; rather, he is credited with developing the first practical method of photography. In 1834, he created the "calotype" process, which allowed for the production of negative images on paper, enabling multiple positive prints to be made from a single negative. His work laid the foundation for modern photography, but the first actual camera was developed by Joseph Nicéphore Niépce in the early 1820s.
In Paris, France by Joseph Nicephore in i850
He first introduced, in 1871, the alternative way of dry plates to photography. Wich was more convinient to phographers, letting the process of preparation of plates focused by manufacterers.
Writing came first long before photography.
The first commercial photography process was the daguerreotype, developed by French artist and physicist Louis Daguerre in 1839. The process involved exposing a silver-plated copper sheet to iodine vapor, creating a light-sensitive surface. This was then exposed to light in a camera obscura and further treated with mercury vapor to fix the image permanently. The daguerreotype was the first commercially successful photography process and was widely used for portraiture in the mid-19th century. The daguerreotype was an important milestone in the history of photography, as it marked the first use of a chemical process to capture a permanent image. The process was relatively easy to use, and the results were very sharp and detailed. However, the daguerreotype was a one-of-a-kind image and could not be duplicated, which limited its commercial potential. In 1851, the collodion wet plate process was developed by Englishman Frederick Scott Archer. This process used a glass plate coated in collodion and sensitized with silver nitrate. The plate was exposed in a camera obscura and developed with a variety of chemicals. This process was much faster and cheaper than the daguerreotype, and it allowed for multiple copies of the same image to be made. This process quickly became the most popular form of photography, and remained the dominant form until the 1880s.
On a summer day in 1827, Joseph Nicephore Niepce made the first photographic image with a camera obscura. Louis Daguerre was the inventor of the first practical process of photography. In 1829, he formed a partnership with Joseph Nicephore Niepce to improve the process Niepce had developed. In 1839 after several years of experimentation and Niepce's death, Daguerre developed a more convenient and effective method of photography, naming it after himself - the daguerreotype.
The first practical color process for photography was the Autochrome process, developed by the Lumière brothers in 1907. It involved a screen of dyed potato starch grains that acted as color filters to create a color image on a glass plate negative.
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Photography as a usable process goes back to the 1820s with the development of chemical photography. The first permanent photograph was an image produced in 1825 by the French inventor Nicéphore Niépce
Samuel Morse
Robert Fulton
Yes, Hamilton Smith, an American inventor, is known for several contributions besides his work on the microscope. He invented the first practical method for producing the process of "photography" on glass plates and made advancements in various optical devices. His innovations played a significant role in the development of imaging technologies.
No, but she was the inventor of first practical mechanical dishwasher.See link below.
Alexander Graham Bell, in 1876, invented the first practical telephone.
Robert Fulton
Scottish inventor Willam Cullen 1748, but the first practical one was in 1834.
Samuel Colt invented the first, practical repeating pistol.