Alphonse Giroux

From Camera-wiki.org
Revision as of 20:18, 31 August 2006 by U. kulick (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Alphonse Giroux made the first series production of a photographic camera.

He was a relative of Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre who had improved the photographic methods of Joseph Nicéphore Niépce and his son Isidore Niépce by finding a new basic material, i.e. iodized polished silver-plated copper-plates, a new developing method with quicksilver, and as fixing method a salt water bath. Since that was a total redesign of Niepce's method Isodore Niépce accepted a treaty that the invention should be named after Daguerre. The French government bought it from them. A law given by the French Parliament said that the invention should be given to the world for free.

Daguerre himself designed a solid wooden camera with achromatic lens. Giroux constructed it an made a series of that camera.

cameras

Le Daguerreotype (1839)

address

  • Alph. Giroux et Cie.
  • rue du Coq St Honoré
  • Paris

Links

the copyright lawsuit of 1839 about a "brochure explicative du daguerréotype"