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Item 35: The Capitol, Undated

 Item
Identifier: 35

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

Lantern slides were patented in 1850 by William and Frederick Langenheim. They began experimenting in the 1840s with the Magic Lantern to display colorful photographic images. Originallythey attempted to use daguerreotypes. Daguerreotypes are opaque, so the Langenheim brothers sought anew medium that could be projected. They took advantage of the works of Niépce de St. Victor, who discovered a process of adhering a light sensitive solution onto glass, which created a negative. The Langenheim brothers used that negative to print onto a piece of glass, producing a positive image. This image allowed for sufficient projection. Their invention was named Hyalotype. For more information on lantern slides see the Library of Congress: American Memory website, http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/landscape/lanternhistory.html

Dates

  • Creation: Undated

Extent

1 Photographic Slides (An image of the Capitol in Washington, D.C.)

Language of Materials

English

Repository Details

Part of the Thomason Special Collections & SHSU University Archives Repository

Contact:
1830 Bobby K. Marks Drive
Huntsville TX 77341 US
9362941619