My name is Jonathan Danforth and I'm a Daguerreotype artist.
My Website http://www.shinyphotos.com has lots more information, go check it out, OK?
The Daguerreotype was the first patented photographic process. Patented by Daguerre in 1839 after ripping off substantial portions of the technology from Joseph-Nicephore Niepce in the 1820s and 1830s, the Daguerreotype was heralded at the time as an amazing invention. The Daguerreotype remained popular for only a short time (25 years or so at the most) because it was (and remains) expensive, irreproducible, and tricky to make in the first place. Why did a technology that had so much going against it stick around for so long? Daguerreotypes are beautiful in the way that diamonds are beautiful. Precious and rare is the Daguerreotype.
Silver + iodine + light + UV = photograph.
Check out the attached video clip to see what it looks like to hold a finished Daguerreotype in your (my) hand.
I'm dumping a lot of information about the process in the various steps so check 'em out.
mvi_4039.avi2 MB
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You should get pretty damn close to a mirror finish with this process. Most daguerreotypists will next go on to a hand-buffing stage. I use powdered black iron oxide on a velvet board. See image.








































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I do a lot of photo work, I am a grad student at UW Madison, I think I will be using dags in my MFA show. I just built a really nice iodine fuming box I can't wait to try it out. I looked around the net and found a few designs and made my own new box, the old one was decaying in places..... iodine is nasty to the max. Your instructable helped get me going, I went and read every book I could find on the topic, collected materials and started trying.
Check out myspace url to see some of my pix (yeah, I know myspace is pretty dorky, but as an anachronist I find myself simply unable or at least unwilling to make a real webpage.)
Great job!
http://www.myspace.com/erinsinnerspace
and did someone already try to reproduce by contact a 35 mm bw negative (or positive) using that way ?
you could even cut the negative to fit the inside of the medallion, wich once exposed by contact and directly "developped" receives the cover ( supposedly a desarmable hinge, to faciltate processing , would be used) and becomes a directly made artwork. decorated silver outside, a dag inside... woawww
(idea TM Zappymax... :-) ... just in case. and franchising or partnership welcome !!!
if silver medallions are necessary, in Taxco or other parts of Mexico they could become available and made on precise demand. silverwork is a real craftmanship there. also plated plates could be produced at a lower price than in the Usa i suppose. so next year have travel to those places and check that... and call me to see if practically and commercially that would be interesting...
phsov@hotmail.com
i saw in washington a serie of dags in a low light gallery. its important to remember the dags must be protected from light, therefore the covered box or frame.
the low sensibility also reserves the dag to artistic/nature morte use, no way to pose for a wedding pict.
even if old picts *bromure) were made using "immobilisation" brackets to keep the people steady for long seconds if not minutes, meanwhile the pict was made.
but there are many portraits made with dags. so the model had to be a real "patient" , waiting and suffering... but after all...
also well considered, the secrecy of access (the result is visible under the cover of some box...in low light conditions .. ) rejoins an interest to avoid "exposure" of oneself or one object to the eyes of anybody. Dags are a kind of retro fit into privacy. you keep the pict of your loved one (any kind) under cover, for your eyes only, and a few others. restricted access. even a small one (wich now could be made with a modified 35mm) inside a silver or gold medallion on your neck. not a bad idea after all,