Wet-collodion

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The Wet-Collodion (or wet-plate collodion) process is an early negative-positive photographic process. It was invented in 1850, and published in 1851 by Frederick Scott Archer, although a Frenchman, Gustave Le Gray may have discovered the process at around the same time.

The process uses potassium iodide dissolved with collodion - a solution of gun-cotton in ether. Gun-cotton is made by treating cotton wool (almost pure cellulose) with nitric acid, producing nitro-cellulose. Nitro-cellulose was later used as a flexible base material for film; in the wet collodion process however, it does the same job that gelatine does in modern film; it contains the light-sensitive material, in a layer permeable to chemical solutions.

The potassium iodide/collodion solution is spread onto glass plates, after which the ether evaporates. Before the ether completely evaporates, the plates are sensitized in a bath of silver nitrate solution. The plate had to be loaded into a dark slide and exposed while still wet, so the plate preparation had to be done immediately before use (once dry, the collodion would not be permeable to the developing solution[2]). This meant that outside the studio, photographers had to carry a small tent with a supply of plates, sensitization bath and bottles of the solutions. However, the process was popular in part because the plates were considerably more sensitive than other existing media, allowing shorter exposure times, which in particular made portrait photography more convenient.[2]

The collodion process was used in other forms:

  • [Ambrotype]s are direct positive images made by the wet collodion method on glass plates, using the reflective property of the developed silver image.
  • [Ferrotype]s (also called tintypes or melanotypes) are direct positive images made in the same way, but on black enamelled iron plates.


Notes

  1. Notes for the exhibition Freeze Frame at the National Maritime Museum.
  2. 2.0 2.1 National Media Museum Information Sheet Photographs on Glass.

Links