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Revision as of 19:57, 8 September 2012
The studio of Bradley and Rulofson of San Francisco (Image rights) |
The early daguerreotype photography was optimal for achitecture because many early cameras had a kind of landscape lens which needed usage at small aperture, thus allowing only exposure times of ten minutes even in the sunshine. Soon there was a solution available, the fast Petzval lens which reduced exposure times to 30 seconds. This was still much time to keep still for the photographic model. Photographers had to avoid situations in which wind blew thru hair and dress of the portrayed person, or cold weather caused the model to shiver. Thus closed but light rooms were necessary, often wide rooms with glass roof. The Punch cartoon below shows a cat looking thru the studio's glass roof, the image above even a studio's whole glass roof. Seem to have been typical locations, with the artistic studio or "photographic studio" in a huge attic. The image above shows that mirrors, reflectors and diffusors may have been used to optimize the light falling onto the model.
Soon exposure times in bright light could be shortened by improving the applied photographic processes, but exposure times were still a few seconds. Thus the studio needed special equipment like chairs with small headrest and mise-en-scène furniture, pillars and stuff which also served as stilt on which the portrayed could rest. Some photographers even offered making photographs with huge background painting behind the portayed. When "Flashlight Lawrence" had made his efforts with magnesium powder flashes special tripod based studio flashes were developed soon. As well as bright gas lamps and last not least electric lamps.
Sam Hood's studio[1] (Image rights) |
photo shop advertising its studio with an old studio camera and an imaging sample in the shopwindow image by Uwe Kulick (Image rights) |
electronic studio flash with semi-reflecting umbrella image by Raphael Borges (Image rights) |
head and back rest (Image rights) |
[ ] |
Photographic Saloon, East End of London, 1861 by Henry Mayhew (Image rights) |
The artistic studio
let's have a little fun
cartoon from Punch magazine image by John Leech (Image rights) |
References and Links
- ↑ see Sam Hood's image collection in Library of New South Wales on Flickr