No, daguerreotype Photography and wet-plate photography are not the same. The daguerreotype, invented in 1839 by Louis Daguerre, involves a silver-coated copper plate that is exposed to light and then developed with Mercury vapor, producing a unique, highly detailed image. Wet-plate photography, developed in the 1850s, uses a glass plate coated with a light-sensitive emulsion that must remain wet during the exposure and development process. While both are early photographic processes, they differ significantly in materials and techniques.
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.
Typically, a cinematographer and a director of photography are the same position. And in some cases, they can also function as the camera operator. They work with the director to create the desired shots.
If anything photography is a subcategory of media arts. Media arts is a very broad subject, it may include technical media, graphic design, photography, etc.
Yes, shutter speed and exposure time are the same thing in photography. It refers to the amount of time the camera's shutter is open to allow light to reach the camera sensor or film.
Sepia
Live Photography and animation basically work the same way. Live action filming takes a series of chronological images of moving objects and plays them back in sequence. Animation does the same thing, except it uses individual, illustrated frames.
He thought Hepzibah was angry with him because of the scowl on her face.
Spelled STEREOGRAPHY it is tha same as stereo photography.
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.
no, because the photography is the input or the processing of how we see the output or the pictures, but without photography we cant see the images that we produce..
Yes
No, they are not the same thing. Mean and average are the same thing.