The Birth of Photography: Drawing With Light (and silver iodide)

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  • Опубликовано: 20 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 3,4 тыс.

  • @TechnologyConnections
    @TechnologyConnections  3 года назад +2399

    It just occurred to me that Agfa-Ansco's designation of 120 as B-2 could simply derive from Brownie No. 2.

    • @lornova79
      @lornova79 3 года назад +39

      "Reasons"

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat 3 года назад +136

      I am offended by the text on screen at 19:09. You totally missed the opportunity for "Dog-guerrotype."

    • @Nippek
      @Nippek 3 года назад +29

      Since community subtitles are no longer a thing, is there any way I can still make subtitles for your videos?

    • @rashakawa
      @rashakawa 3 года назад +16

      ... really need to stop reading the comments before watching the video...

    • @danieltrepuen5247
      @danieltrepuen5247 3 года назад +17

      As a german analog photographer, never heard B2 before, learned something I guess. Thanks for that

  • @NateSmith
    @NateSmith 3 года назад +1755

    32:40 “Latent image of vaporization.” That was perfect.

    • @xyonofcalhoun
      @xyonofcalhoun 3 года назад +107

      That got me. Along with the deadpan hold.

    • @laz7354
      @laz7354 3 года назад +45

      I almost had to stop watching at that point. 🤣

    • @AlienValkyrie
      @AlienValkyrie 3 года назад +15

      Oh shit, I didn't even get that until you pointed it out xD

    • @Bretil
      @Bretil 3 года назад +41

      I didn't get it at all, can you explain?

    • @Scrial
      @Scrial 3 года назад +79

      @@Bretil Latent heat is the energy that's required to bring water from a liquid to vapor so from 100°C liquid to 100°C Vapor.

  • @Beanedict_C
    @Beanedict_C 3 года назад +784

    I’ve known how pinhole cameras work for ages, but this explanation is the first time I’ve really understood *why* they work that way. The “move your head and the view changes” lead in was truly eye opening.

    • @StuninRub
      @StuninRub 3 года назад +30

      Trust me, this NOT how it works. I've watch Buzzfeed and studied the arts of Social Justice. A camera is like this functions on distilled racism. The white man designed the optical laws of nature to make brown people look bad.

    • @MrTaxiRob
      @MrTaxiRob 3 года назад +10

      sounds like someone needs a vaccine booster...

    • @William-Morey-Baker
      @William-Morey-Baker 3 года назад +46

      @@StuninRub interesting flavor of trolling you have there, is that your own recipe or did you find it on 8chan?

    • @HemlockRidge
      @HemlockRidge 3 года назад +6

      @@StuninRub Don't worry! Someone will re-write history to make it all about "people of color".

    • @visualdarkness
      @visualdarkness 3 года назад

      I know! Had the same moments.

  • @RemiCardona
    @RemiCardona 3 года назад +794

    14:50 "not to be confused with the nick-collodion process" man I was having a shitty day, and now I'm grinning from ear to ear, thanks Alec!

    • @minacapella8319
      @minacapella8319 3 года назад +19

      Well, nickelodeons were kind of photography too :)

    • @billgreen1861
      @billgreen1861 3 года назад +4

      @@minacapella8319
      That's wright we used to put a coin in and start cranking but, it was "moving pictures" as they used to call it.

    • @TheGuruStud
      @TheGuruStud 3 года назад +3

      these dad jokes are getting absurd

    • @xpez9694
      @xpez9694 Год назад +2

      I dont know if they still have them but at Disney World they had a entire arcade that was all of these old timey Nickelodeon machines..they were all free!

    • @satyris410
      @satyris410 Год назад +5

      29:45 "making sure the flaps are retracted and locked, like any good pilot" absolutely love this guy, such a dry sense of humour he could actually be British!

  • @alexdhomochevsky7904
    @alexdhomochevsky7904 3 года назад +443

    Oh my, FINALLY somebody shows daguerreotype from several angles! I can't believe how difficult it is to find a video like that! Thank you so much!

    • @democracybacksliding
      @democracybacksliding Год назад +9

      This guy🤯 videos and he keeps blowing my mind he should be a national treasure or working at as a museum curator , then again, who knows maybe he is a museum curator

  • @niek024
    @niek024 3 года назад +470

    'Darkening the Blue' sounds like an amazing pop fusion jazz album, that I now want to hear.

    • @Left-Earth
      @Left-Earth 3 года назад +8

      My favorite Jazz Fusion band is *Casiopea* .
      They were big in Japan in the early 80's, even getting radio airtime on stations in the USA.

    • @arlandi
      @arlandi 3 года назад +11

      and when they are asked why use that name, their answer:
      "for possibly hipster reason"

    • @CyberCreeper22
      @CyberCreeper22 3 года назад +3

      I'll keep that in mind if I ever record fusion jazz

    • @MrTaxiRob
      @MrTaxiRob 3 года назад +2

      possibly a lost Chuck Shuldiner project demo

    • @personnel5757
      @personnel5757 3 года назад +3

      These comments are really doing it for me, and I haven't even watched the video yet
      fusion rules (listen to some Cynic dudes!)

  • @thanksfernuthin
    @thanksfernuthin 3 года назад +210

    That Daguerreotype you have is a treasure. The detail on it is amazing and it seems to be a pleasant family photo. A beautiful piece of history.

  • @danielnadeau5741
    @danielnadeau5741 3 года назад +742

    Playing the long game with “latent image of vaporization….”
    Love it

    • @McImTheBear
      @McImTheBear 3 года назад

      this

    • @jammin023
      @jammin023 3 года назад +24

      I half expected a tumbleweed to cross the screen...

    • @ojkolsrud1
      @ojkolsrud1 3 года назад +31

      His jokes are so advanced I need to read other people's comments with quotes before understanding them. I did get it though, without checking the answer=P

    • @Luckmorne
      @Luckmorne 3 года назад +11

      I audibly gasped and then guffawed at this one.

    • @patrickj
      @patrickj 3 года назад

      Oh my... just now it hit me like a truck 🙈

  • @ElvenSpellmaker
    @ElvenSpellmaker 3 года назад +650

    _"Making sure the flaps are retracted and locked like any good pilot"_
    You're killing it today!

    • @nickb20
      @nickb20 3 года назад +2

      Wait I don’t get this one

    • @Appletank8
      @Appletank8 3 года назад +31

      @@nickb20
      Planes also use flaps, they’re the extending bits that increase lift for take off and landing. You retract them for cruise, since they have a lot of drag.

    • @davids7550
      @davids7550 3 года назад +7

      Same can be said for my long-johns.

    • @christo930
      @christo930 3 года назад +3

      speaking of death, the baby in the picture was probably dead at the time the picture was taken. Photographs were very expensive back then and it made little sense to take a picture of a baby you see every day. There is some blur around the arm, but that could have been the mother.

    • @ElvenSpellmaker
      @ElvenSpellmaker 3 года назад

      @@christo930 Although nothing to do with my comment, I thought the movement was from the mother, you can see one of her hands is blurred (but that could just be the baby making it so).
      Maybe you're right.

  • @pipolwes000
    @pipolwes000 3 года назад +180

    I absolutely love the running bits on this channel, particularly "throught the magic of buying X of them".

    • @the_undead
      @the_undead 2 года назад +34

      My favorite version of that is
      "Through the magic of buying way too much f***ing dishwasher detergent we can do a number of tests and make some comparisons"

    • @youdontknowme5969
      @youdontknowme5969 2 года назад +12

      I replayed the dishwashing detergent one like 20 times 🤣

  • @minerharry
    @minerharry 3 года назад +735

    “Through the magic of buying two of them, I have **one** of them right here!*

    • @peterrenn6341
      @peterrenn6341 3 года назад +51

      In my experience a great many of the "daguerreotypes" sold on ebay are in fact ambrotypes. Both are wonderful processes but daguerreotypes are rarer.

    • @RanaLoca
      @RanaLoca 3 года назад +14

      Biggest plot-twist of the century

    • @rjc0234
      @rjc0234 3 года назад +13

      One of the best catchphrases on this show XD

    • @youdontknowme5969
      @youdontknowme5969 2 года назад +3

      that damn inflation...

    • @Knightrem
      @Knightrem 2 года назад +2

      My dad's entire life

  • @DIYBuilds
    @DIYBuilds 3 года назад +1058

    Insensitive plates were quite rude.... I love it lol

    • @luisvarca
      @luisvarca 3 года назад +8

      Somehow I missed the joke until now. So sad and brilliant.

    • @ojkolsrud1
      @ojkolsrud1 3 года назад +2

      Oooh, that's what he meant=P

    • @louisvictor3473
      @louisvictor3473 3 года назад +2

      You think you love it until you meet one of them and it opens its insensitive platey mouth...

    • @alenasenie6928
      @alenasenie6928 3 года назад +2

      Is good to see with captions
      [uncomfortable stare]

    • @YotaLC-wo6qf
      @YotaLC-wo6qf 3 года назад

      Inread this right as he said it.

  • @Yayojayoful
    @Yayojayoful 3 года назад +103

    I'm a photographer who has read/studied this stuff for decades. You made one of the better and more accessible summaries I've ever heard. Probably just the best, honestly. This is what I'm going to use whenever I wanna introduce people to real photography.

  • @hewhohasnoidentity4377
    @hewhohasnoidentity4377 3 года назад +418

    Alec pulled me into his vortex with topics I found interesting. Next thing I know I'm learning about dishwashers, lanterns and now photography.
    I never know what the next random topic will be, but I'll be here.

    • @Basilisk_Eternal
      @Basilisk_Eternal 3 года назад +38

      Honestly. we NEED more channels educating us on the most random shit.

    • @ProjectV95
      @ProjectV95 3 года назад +30

      Don't forget the toaster! :D

    • @forgiveman
      @forgiveman 3 года назад +21

      Or the coffee maker.

    • @LucasGentry
      @LucasGentry 3 года назад +9

      Most interesting channel on RUclips, hands down

    • @39zack
      @39zack 3 года назад +7

      He got me interested in dishwasher soap 😮

  • @stephenwilkens3101
    @stephenwilkens3101 3 года назад +276

    Absolutely LOVE the effort you put into the "latent image of vaporization" joke. Bravo 👏😂

    • @teebob21
      @teebob21 3 года назад +19

      I haven't seen a set up that long for a chemistry joke since high school

    • @staticfanatic
      @staticfanatic 3 года назад +10

      i could tell it was a joke but didn't get it. could someone explain?

    • @NBFman1991
      @NBFman1991 3 года назад +29

      @@staticfanatic it's a chemistry joke based on the latent heat of vaporization, which is a physical characteristic of a substance that is defined as the heat required to change one mole of liquid at its boiling point under standard atmospheric pressure. i.e. when you bring something to a boil, you have to give it more heat than what is just needed to raise the temperature like you would before. Extra energy is needed to convert the substance from a liquid to a gas.

    • @stephenwilkens3101
      @stephenwilkens3101 3 года назад +15

      @@staticfanatic yup, what MrDoctor said, and then the image that's imprinted on the film before getting developed is a "latent image." Plus, the photo he took was of actual vaporization lol

    • @ComradePhoenix
      @ComradePhoenix 3 года назад +5

      @@stephenwilkens3101 Really, its a masterful pun.

  • @woodfur00
    @woodfur00 3 года назад +160

    Always impressed by the clarity of your shots of things like the daguerreotype. There's an inherent paradox in getting your hands on something you just have to see with your own eyes, and then capturing its subtleties in a video, but you always succeed to the point where it feels like we're in the room with you. S-tier content.

  • @Mushroom_Muncher
    @Mushroom_Muncher 3 года назад +4125

    “Oldest not-book object I’ve held”
    Rocks: “Am I a joke to you?”

    • @TechnologyConnections
      @TechnologyConnections  3 года назад +1870

      ** oldest not-book human-made object

    • @mrmimeisfunny
      @mrmimeisfunny 3 года назад +168

      @@TechnologyConnections Have you never been in any ancient or medieval building?

    • @baconcatbug
      @baconcatbug 3 года назад +133

      @@mrmimeisfunny Humans didn't make the rock. they shaped it. Big difference

    • @prismglider5922
      @prismglider5922 3 года назад +457

      @@mrmimeisfunny Have you held an ancient building before?

    • @Booksds
      @Booksds 3 года назад +208

      @@baconcatbug “It’s a stone Luigi, you didn’t make it.”

  • @jeremyloveslinux
    @jeremyloveslinux 3 года назад +630

    "possibly hipster reasons" just entered into my vocabulary

    • @Chrishelmuth1978
      @Chrishelmuth1978 3 года назад +30

      @David Reads I think you said this for "possibly hipster reasons" 🤣

    • @reddelta
      @reddelta 3 года назад +1

      Perhaps a one, two beat to process the jokes, that I have a chance to quickly expel air out of my nose in amusement.
      Comedy is all about time.....ing....

    • @lamborambo6384
      @lamborambo6384 3 года назад +3

      All of those words were almost definitely part of your vocabulary already. I think you mean, that phrase just became part of your lexicon.

    • @cashnelson2306
      @cashnelson2306 3 года назад +7

      man with impact font meme pfp in 2021 discovers using "hipster" as an adjective
      this dude is gonna flip when he learns about tiktoks in ten years

    • @alexroge6495
      @alexroge6495 3 года назад

      *impossibly

  • @BradGryphonn
    @BradGryphonn 3 года назад +61

    11:20 I've always been amazed at the detail in a well cared for daguerreotype image. Just beautiful. I've been a keen photographer for many years and have a basic knowledge of the history of the craft. I'm really enjoying your history lesson, though. Thank you.

  • @Rhaifha
    @Rhaifha 3 года назад +134

    I love how you take the mechanics of a technology and really go hands on with it. Not just a diagram and "here's how it works in theory" but "here's this thing and I'm gonna use it". I like that very much!

    • @JessSpruit
      @JessSpruit 3 года назад +9

      Through the magic process of buying two of them!

    • @BradsGonnaPlay
      @BradsGonnaPlay 3 года назад

      He perfectly captures the essence of a PBS show in my opinion and I love it

  • @grafton3073
    @grafton3073 3 года назад +103

    As a truck driver I notice this camera effect off and on when I keep my sleeper dark and have a tiny hole in my mid curtain when they are closed. I can see trucks and people moving in front of my truck on my back sleeper wall during bright daylight. 👍🏻

    • @MrTaxiRob
      @MrTaxiRob 3 года назад +5

      thank you for your service, my fellow essential worker!

    • @matthewb5364
      @matthewb5364 3 года назад +5

      If trucks were around before cameras, just imagine, you could have invented the camera! The guy who invented the TV (also featured heavily on this channel) was a farmer who was inspired by the plow pattern of a field to create the side-to-side electron gun movement.

    • @grafton3073
      @grafton3073 3 года назад

      😎🖖🏼

    • @KairuHakubi
      @KairuHakubi 3 года назад +1

      now that you mention it, I think i've seen something like that too, and never noticed.

    • @presidentirinavladimirovna7054
      @presidentirinavladimirovna7054 3 года назад

      It was so cool seeing it for the first time in my truck

  • @raydunakin
    @raydunakin 3 года назад +107

    Wow, this really takes me back! My first camera was a Kodak Brownie Hawkeye, which was just a slightly more modern version of the Brownie in the video. (Technically it was my younger brother's camera but I used it a lot.)

    • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
      @Allan_aka_RocKITEman 3 года назад +11

      I believe _"appropriated"_ is the word you did not use...😊

    • @raydunakin
      @raydunakin 3 года назад +5

      @@Allan_aka_RocKITEman LOL!

  • @Petr75661
    @Petr75661 3 года назад +326

    5:23 "ray tracing was really slow"
    Some things never change.

    • @BeatsbyVegas
      @BeatsbyVegas 3 года назад +8

      we need dlss

    • @Ichijoe2112
      @Ichijoe2112 3 года назад +2

      @@BeatsbyVegas Yours for only 2500$ where available. Which is increasingly becoming a problem... Com'on Brandon.

    • @jayhom5385
      @jayhom5385 3 года назад +10

      mfrs: Look at all the cool looking stuff.
      gamers: turns everything off for framerates

    • @PainterVierax
      @PainterVierax 3 года назад +2

      technically the process he described is contour tracing.

    • @paulhaynes8045
      @paulhaynes8045 3 года назад

      REALLY slow for me - don't understand it at all...

  • @lillyclarity9699
    @lillyclarity9699 3 года назад +64

    19:10 what a good boy. hes sitting so still. i'm glad we got a picture of that sweet dog

  • @shaunlaisfilm
    @shaunlaisfilm 3 года назад +33

    Louis Daguerre had a invention & business connection with Nicéphore Niépce, the man who is credited with the 1st photograph in the late 1820's. It was called the latent image back then because the word Photography was not invented until the late 1830's.
    Louis Daguerre & Nicéphore Niépce shared the same optics/lens maker (Charles Chevalier) who after learning about Louis' ambitions with trying to create a successful latent image, connected him with Louis Daguerre.
    There are postal letters between the two, & Nicéphore Niépce's process with the latent image played an encouraging role in Louis Daguerre's Daguerrerotype.

  • @t17389z
    @t17389z 3 года назад +83

    As with many of the commenters, I would love to applaud to the latent image of vaporization joke. However, my favorite moment was the audio quirk where the noise of the shutter ended the audio being from the outdoor scene, and returned it to the indoor scene.
    Absolutely masterful.

  • @haydenweir6416
    @haydenweir6416 3 года назад +44

    13:47 when it clicked in my brain how the degarreotype was sort of a negative and I could see that the black hair of the subject was, in fact, just a perfectly reflective mirror reflecting a dark object, I literally gasped and pauses the video. I’ve been staring at it now for almost 5 minutes, amazed at how it just clicked and now I can see it. What a fascinating method of photography

  • @kennytheamazing
    @kennytheamazing 3 года назад +16

    This video made me look at an old post-war camera my great-grandmother used to own. It's been sitting on a shelf at my place as a display piece for years, but during this video I had a closer look at and figured out how to fold the lens in, and that it takes 120 film and has the same dials and peepholes the brownie camera does. (it's that telescoping paper kind of lens, and it's been in the unfolded position ever since I found it 20 years ago) I just ordered some 120 film for it, and I'm excited to try it out!

    • @MetalDEmpire
      @MetalDEmpire Год назад +1

      Bellows is the word you're lookin for

  • @nonnobissolum
    @nonnobissolum 3 года назад +168

    You, sir, are a gentleman and a scholar. And probably a wizard, too. Cheers.

    • @dustysparks
      @dustysparks 3 года назад +6

      With that hair? Yes. No doubt.

    • @Octave_Rolland
      @Octave_Rolland 3 года назад +1

      he's even one of the best wizards on the internet

  • @espeon200
    @espeon200 3 года назад +102

    When I took photography in college, the professor turned the photo lab into a Camera Obscura that we sat in for the first lesson where he explained how SLR cameras work. That was one of the coolest classes I ever took.

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape 3 года назад +20

      Somewhere I have a photo book written by a guy who turned his VW Microbus van into a giant camera obscura by lightproofing the interior and putting a pinhole on one side of the van. Basically a giant camera on wheels. He'd drive it to a location and park it with the pinhole side facing the subject, pin a large sheet of photo paper on the back wall, and open the pinhole to expose it.

    • @Michael75579
      @Michael75579 3 года назад +1

      When I was a physics student we did a course on taking, developing and printing black and white photographs. This would have been sometime in the 1985-1988 timeframe, so this course probably didn't last much longer outside a few dedicated degrees.

    • @peterrenn6341
      @peterrenn6341 3 года назад +1

      I teach photography and I still do this with my students in 2021!

  • @raydunakin
    @raydunakin 3 года назад +137

    "Early attempts at making dry plates resulted in very insensitive plates which were quite rude..." LOL!!!

    • @Nugcon
      @Nugcon 2 года назад +3

      This is the only joke I got, I'm too dumb for this.

  • @CyanLightning
    @CyanLightning 3 года назад +396

    32:40 "On the film, we now have a latent image of vaporization"
    Wow, just wow.

    • @Albtraum_TDDC
      @Albtraum_TDDC 3 года назад +27

      the pause length was analogous to the pun size
      ...
      the latent heat of vaporization or evaporation

    • @penepleto1210
      @penepleto1210 2 года назад +2

      English isn't my first language so while I love this guy's puns, I think this is the first one that I didn't get

    • @IntiNikelaos
      @IntiNikelaos 2 года назад +1

      @@penepleto1210 I'm not sure I fully understood it either :P

    • @joewell6435
      @joewell6435 19 дней назад

      Hands down the best joke on this channel

  • @BasenjiAdventures
    @BasenjiAdventures 3 года назад +50

    This man is a master at teaching us topics we never realized we needed to know about! 😊🐕🐕🐾🐾

  • @Jacobhopkins117
    @Jacobhopkins117 3 года назад +56

    “Through the magic of buying two of them, I have one.” This joke will never get old.

  • @AntigonePoss
    @AntigonePoss 3 года назад +78

    An apartment I stayed in for a few months had a window that created a camera obscura effect when the blinds were closed and covered by a blackout curtain. This made it so I could see the image of people putting their garbage in the bin around noontime when I was trying to sleep for my night shift job. It was pretty cool, but because it wasn't a camera obscura proper, it was very distorted. I could still tell what it was though.

    • @nonofyabeeswax9955
      @nonofyabeeswax9955 3 года назад +23

      At my great-grandfathers house there was a keyhole near perfectly positioned between a window and a wall behind it. On sunny days in the afternoon you had a nice image of treetops swaying in the wind, projected on the wall.
      Thank you for reminding me of that.

    • @MrTaxiRob
      @MrTaxiRob 3 года назад +32

      makes me wonder how many ghost sightings were/are actually caused by this phenomenon

    • @CraftsmanOfAwsomenes
      @CraftsmanOfAwsomenes 3 года назад +12

      @@MrTaxiRob Wow, that’s a pretty good observation.

    • @d2factotum
      @d2factotum 3 года назад +5

      interesting to note that this also happens on walls behind bushes on sunny days. You know all those dappled dots of light? They're actually images of the sun created by hundreds of pin-holes between the leaves. You don't notice normally because the sun is round and so its image is just a circle, but during an eclipse you see lots of crescents instead!

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 3 года назад +3

      @@d2factotum I’ve noticed that during a couple of eclipses. It’s wild!

  • @chris2thejmedia
    @chris2thejmedia 2 года назад +16

    Even though the daguerrotype is basically a mirror, its incredible that the images are so detailed and lifelike even with the flaws inherent of the process. Makes me appreciate them more than modern day pics, even if its just a little.

  • @tehbieber
    @tehbieber 3 года назад +52

    I was wondering if you'd ever cover some of this stuff, it's really neat to see as a collodion hobbyist and occasional daguerreotypist. Just a few small notes about daguerreotypes:
    1. You don't actually *need* to develop a daguerreotype to create an image. The silver halides will eventually produce an image if you expose them long enough, but the big problem with that, aside from exposure time, is that the sensitized plate actually turns *black* in the exposed areas, which means that you would end up with a negative image that could only be viewed as such by reflecting a white background in the plate. The beauty of mercury development is that not only does it bring out a latent image that wasn't visible to the naked eye, but it replaces the darkened silver halides with a white amalgamation of mercury and silver, which is the reason you're able to view the plate as a positive.
    2. Generally a sixth plate daguerreotype wouldn't be one sensitized plate cut up into six pieces (although there were some cameras that could project multiple identical images onto a single plate to be cut up later), it was just a popular plate size about 1/6th of a full plate, which is a size that Daguerre somewhat arbitrarily picked to give an edge to the French lens-making industry (the blanks required to make a lens that would cover that size were more readily available in France than England). In practice a whole plate was extraordinarily expensive (even today it would cost me a little under $200 to get a clad silver plate in that size) so they were rarely used. The first successful Daguerreotype portraits were made with mirror cameras that could only create a clean image about the size of a 1/6th plate, so between that momentum and the fact that they were just a much more affordable size it ended up becoming the most common portrait size.
    3. The replacement of daguerrotypes with collodion photographs has less to do with the ease of viewing and a lot more to do with the practicality and expense of creating a Daguerreotype. Collodion allows much faster exposure times which helps with portraiture, but most importantly it's much, much less expensive. To make a daguerreotype you need an entire plate clad in metallic silver. To make an ambrotype or tintype you use a silver nitrate bath which can be reused for a great many plates before replenishing, because only an infinitesimal amount of silver actually makes it onto the much cheaper substrate.
    It's also worth mentioning that collodion allowed the creation of glass negatives, which could be printed to make as many identical copies as you want
    For anyone interested in the origins of photography, Mike Robinson's dissertation on the development of the daguerreotype process is really fascinating: centurydarkroom.com/s/Robinson_Dissertation_TMAD_sm-lsmh.pdf

    • @rahulsharmajammu
      @rahulsharmajammu 3 года назад +2

      I was waiting for someone to talk about Mike here! The guy is a walking talking encyclopedia. When folks say that if someone can replicate a Southworth and Hawes, it’s him; they aren’t kidding!

    • @KalebPeters99
      @KalebPeters99 3 года назад +1

      Thanks for the clarifications, this is super interesting!

    • @Melanie16040
      @Melanie16040 3 года назад +2

      Thank you, just wanted to let you know I read your entire comment. Quite interesting!

    • @peterrenn6341
      @peterrenn6341 3 года назад +1

      I asked Mike if he ever used Becquerel development. - He pulled a face! As others have said, he's a modern master.

  • @Macakiux
    @Macakiux 3 года назад +261

    11:42 People used to dress like this babies and toddlers from both sexes. They were also treated sort of genderless until later stages of childhood.

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 3 года назад +15

      Yes, boys and girls both had long curls and dresses.

    • @aviaviavian
      @aviaviavian 3 года назад +5

      Yaaaaaaaay, fuckin Maceys

    • @hengineer
      @hengineer 3 года назад +26

      Part of the fact that child mortality rates were quite high.

    • @lucasmcinnis5045
      @lucasmcinnis5045 3 года назад +85

      Also because clothes were expensive, and dressing your 5+ children is a lot easier when they can wear unisex clothes for the first seven years of their lives

    • @lawrencewatts1838
      @lawrencewatts1838 3 года назад +1

      Oops, i just commented this above! Should have checked first.

  • @rodneylives
    @rodneylives 2 года назад +5

    It is kind of nice to think that mother and her child, now long gone, are commemorated by this video.

  •  3 года назад +460

    18:44 "Very insensitive plates, which were quite rude"
    I love deadpan humour.

    • @phydeux
      @phydeux 3 года назад +6

      My instant reaction to that was 😑

    • @anthonypower9121
      @anthonypower9121 3 года назад +3

      I wonder how many takes that line took to get right.

  • @kingcosworth2643
    @kingcosworth2643 3 года назад +88

    I still find it amazing that humans worked out how to record an image before they worked out how to record a sound.

    • @raygunsforronnie847
      @raygunsforronnie847 3 года назад +34

      I think it's because audio is invisible. Seriously. How to record an acoustic waveform that can't be seen? How do we capture and store and recall something invisible? It took some time to make that happen.

    • @Octave_Rolland
      @Octave_Rolland 3 года назад +6

      This is deep stuff. We're visual beings.

    • @MrTridac
      @MrTridac 3 года назад +3

      But then we stuck with the chemical stuff for a century. Took us a while to get images stored electrically.

    • @TassieLorenzo
      @TassieLorenzo 2 года назад

      @@MrTridac Video since the 1930's was always electronic AFAIK? :) Maybe video camera tubes were capable of pictures of the similar quality as 16mm and 35mm film, but with the standards for broadcast television set as they were, there was no point to hypothetically record at higher line counts? I dunno. In the field, film was used instead of videotape for recording television serials well into the 1970's or 1980's IIRC (you'd see the difference when the protagonists went from studio to location), so I don't know if recording on location with video was impractical.

    • @the_undead
      @the_undead 2 года назад +2

      @@TassieLorenzo you could record on location shoots with video equipment that was not film cameras the if you was that those cameras were very much not small things so if you wanted to be able to bring the camera with you to record a walking actor then good luck have fun. Verizon 8 mm or 16 mm film camera was quite small and hand portable pretty much even a 35 mm camera would be pretty portable

  • @gtoger
    @gtoger 3 года назад +294

    Observation #1: I'm detecting, with approval, a fair amount of "Airplane!" type humor. Observation #2: Not calling it the Flarble may look a missed opportunity on the surface. Then again, you just know that name would have been genericized to the point that all facial tissues are Kleenex, copy machines are Xerox and photographic devices are Flarbles. And much like Google has become a verb, people would say "flarble me!" when they wanted a picture taken. Eastman-Kodak was one step ahead and knew what was coming. (Well, except for digital photography. They blew it there.)

    • @heysemberthkingdom-brunel5041
      @heysemberthkingdom-brunel5041 3 года назад +4

      I'm pretty sure, Mr. Eastman was dead by the time digital photography was becoming practicable, but I'd be happy to be proven wrong...

    • @GhostHostMemories
      @GhostHostMemories 3 года назад +6

      wait... worlds collide. no #DRUMBEATS????

    • @user-lk2vo8fo2q
      @user-lk2vo8fo2q 3 года назад +15

      do people say "Kodak me"? or are you suggesting that kodak didn't genericize because it's not as fun to say as "flarble"?

    • @robertkirchner7981
      @robertkirchner7981 3 года назад +18

      Okay, how about "a flarble moment"?

    • @DarkElfDiva
      @DarkElfDiva 3 года назад +13

      Kodak actually invented the digital camera, but you are correct in that they thought it was a pointless technology...or they sat on it because film sales made bank. The jury's still out on that.

  • @DeviPotato
    @DeviPotato 3 года назад +460

    "a latent image of vaporization" got me. the dedication to your extremely silly jokes is equally admirable and infuriating

    • @floorpizza8074
      @floorpizza8074 3 года назад +8

      Yup. His kids will enjoy the best Dad jokes ever.

    • @hurlaky43
      @hurlaky43 3 года назад +15

      That long set up to that joke was totally worth it

    • @kutsen39
      @kutsen39 3 года назад +9

      I didn't get that joke, can somebody explain for me?

    • @austinleong3319
      @austinleong3319 3 года назад +23

      @@kutsen39 It's referring to the chemistry/physics concept "latent heat of vaporization", the energy you must put into a quantity of liquid (like water) in order for it to completely vaporize (steam).

    • @debug8377
      @debug8377 3 года назад +6

      ohhhh ok i get it now

  • @NaiveCynic
    @NaiveCynic 3 года назад +102

    "DA-GUERRE" might be the most Chicago your voice has ever been. Always lovely to hear someone appreciate their native brogue.

    • @RickR69
      @RickR69 3 года назад +8

      Your mother's a brogue.

    • @Lizlodude
      @Lizlodude 3 года назад +4

      That one caught me off guard, I was expecting a cut not that lol

    • @AnonymousMod.
      @AnonymousMod. 3 года назад +3

      Seth callback

    • @applehonker
      @applehonker 3 года назад +1

      Almost certainly a jackal

    • @debug8377
      @debug8377 3 года назад

      i bursted out laughing when he said that

  • @B3D5X
    @B3D5X 3 года назад +6

    As a hobbyist photographer who became so enamored with the Wet Collodion process that I actually took the time to learn it, this is the Technology Connections video I've needed! One minor note: since the collodion and silver nitrate are applied to the plate independently and not combined, it's called a 'suspension'. 'Emulsion' would refer to an amalgam of the two combined (which IS actually a thing in Aristotype/Collodio-Chloride printing).
    -Nick-Collodion

  • @LazerLord10
    @LazerLord10 3 года назад +417

    Even as a relatively young person, I made one of those pinhole cameras in highscool. I wish that was still a common thing, darkrooms are still so neat!

    • @Gigachoungus
      @Gigachoungus 3 года назад +2

      I never did that but instead I used B&W camera and learned how to develop in darkrooms

    • @jmacd8817
      @jmacd8817 3 года назад +1

      I made one in jr high… I used a checkbook box.

    • @Mark.Brindle
      @Mark.Brindle 3 года назад +1

      I built my first D/R when I was 18. Getting ready to retire in a few years, I'm designing my new darkroom I'll be building next year. All mine have been for colour photography. I do shoot digital, but nothing like doing it yourself from start to end. Film cameras on eBay are cheap including awesome medium format 120 cameras that costs $8k or more just 20 years ago.

    • @alenasenie6928
      @alenasenie6928 3 года назад +2

      I did not, but I am also from latinoamerica, so, even in a high standard high school (as in high quality, not so expensive) we didn't had access to do things like that, we did a few experiments like sparking flash film and things like that, but there was not much to do and the art teachers do not had access to the materials and environment to make this things possible.

    • @steveweinberg462
      @steveweinberg462 3 года назад

      When I was a Boy Scout I made one that wedged into the opening of a 126 cartridge.

  • @russlehman2070
    @russlehman2070 3 года назад +108

    During my childhood, on a trip to Yellowstone, my Mom, using a roll film camera, made an accidental double exposure, and ended up with a picture that appeared to be a bear submerged in the bottom of a hot spring pool. Usually though, double exposures were not that entertaining. With this type of camera, the best practice was to advance to the next frame as soon as you had taken a picture. In any event, you needed to be consistent in your procedure, so that you didn't accidentally double expose, or advance twice and end up with a blank frame.

    • @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat
      @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat Год назад +6

      Ha, I’m imagining my mom trying to remember to roll the footage every time. She once recorded half of Europe’s sidewalks cause she mixed up recording with not recording. If she used a Kodak like that, every photo would be a double/triple/septuple exposure.

  • @alekskensington5494
    @alekskensington5494 2 года назад +2

    I took a college semseter of this and this video series told me everything and more in less time and way less money! Thank you!

  • @devanshtangri
    @devanshtangri 3 года назад +10

    I've watched almost all of your videos and I now realized that you never used any simulations or animations yet you were able to successfully explain the stuff. Respect

  • @visualdarkness
    @visualdarkness 3 года назад +17

    I have been into film photography for years and know how to do things, but you made me go "ah!" so many times explaining how it actually works! You got such a talent for explaining hard things in an easily understandable way.

  • @LazySpaceRaptor
    @LazySpaceRaptor 3 года назад +7

    It always makes me happy to watch the bloopers at the end. I can relax knowing that my struggle with words is shared with others.

  • @scottmatznick3140
    @scottmatznick3140 3 года назад +62

    Bro you've somehow hit the mark of simultaneously being the most informative and one of the most humorous channels on RUclips. I love learning things, and occasionally do not hate laughing while doing so.

  • @MichaelSteeves
    @MichaelSteeves 3 года назад +18

    I recently inherited a collection of my grandfather's negatives from about 1912-1950. A mix of 116/120/127 and some intermediate sizes that don't seem to fit any standards. Amazing to see images of my family from a century ago, along with the land where my sister still lives. Of course I had to buy a new scanner to handle medium format negatives, but it was worth it!

  • @ezpoppy55
    @ezpoppy55 3 года назад +5

    Dude… As a professor of photography at both the community college and state university level, I take my hat off to you. This was one dense, intense, and condensed presentation!
    It’s hard for me to imagine being completely unaware of all aspects of photography and coming across this - I think “mind blown” might capture it best. Or maybe “mind imploded”… But you put out a gutsy, bravura, and balls to the wall attempt!
    I am going to give a couple days to recover, and then, “once more into the breech!” for part two. Wish me well and tell my wife I loved her!

  • @justinjacobson7495
    @justinjacobson7495 3 года назад +83

    My favorite thing about this channel is how quickly Alec pulls me in and keeps me interested in things I've often never thought about.
    I still think about that toaster video to this day.

    • @parallelcircuit
      @parallelcircuit 3 года назад +6

      Not only that, but how he can still be entertaining even on subjects that I'm already very acquainted with, like photography. I literally knew ALL of this, but the way it's presented was just fantastic.
      I went a step further and now have a Sunbeam Radiant Control toaster on my kitchen counter. It's just as much of a joy to use as you can imagine.

    • @phydeux
      @phydeux 3 года назад

      Just wait until you see the movie "Mortal Engines" and you get 16 min 20 sec.

    • @Dargonhuman
      @Dargonhuman 3 года назад +2

      His video on retroreflectors has literally changed how I look at road signs, street markers and other high visibility reflectors, and until I saw that, I'd never given them a second thought, let alone knew they were called "retro reflectors".

    • @lefear2
      @lefear2 3 года назад +1

      Not only could I stop thinking about the toaster, I bought one off ebay!

    • @Cloudsurfer69
      @Cloudsurfer69 3 года назад

      haha so true, i was (trying) to explain the toaster vid to someone other day :') legendary

  • @scottziegler4238
    @scottziegler4238 3 года назад +37

    I’m looking forward to the rest of this series. My Dad was one of the last non-digital commercial photographers around, and he taught me the processes before he passed away. Also, the George Eastman museum RUclips channel has some great videos on the historic processes and some longer lectures.

  • @bernhardwagner9879
    @bernhardwagner9879 2 года назад +2

    I spent 35 wonderful years teaching teens about photography. I also spent 24 years teaching old people (adults) about photography. This eventually developed into digital imaging on both levels. If you were around earlier I would assign your RUclips presentations as lessons to watch. They are really fun to view

  • @AJsWorld
    @AJsWorld 3 года назад +40

    11:28 I'm actually stunned at how incredible that image looks!

    • @mkv2718
      @mkv2718 3 года назад +2

      You can still find these for sale. There are a few photographers who still make them, though most you’ll find are old

    • @jek__
      @jek__ 3 года назад +2

      Yeah its interesting, low quality photos are a more modern invention than photos. We tend to forget and think things just get better over time, but like the disposable film cameras I had as a kid were a lot worse than those ones

    • @awdrifter3394
      @awdrifter3394 3 года назад +4

      @@jek__ I know right. We had ray tracing back in the 1800s and we're just getting back to ray tracing now. /s

  • @zfinley
    @zfinley 3 года назад +81

    I never know what I'm going to learn when you post a video but I always look forward to the next topic. Excited to watch this series develop!

    • @BruceGinkel
      @BruceGinkel 3 года назад +15

      It's a very sensitive subject but he is exposing it appropriately.

    • @ZGryphon
      @ZGryphon 3 года назад +7

      iseewhatyoudidthere.jpg

    • @61rampy65
      @61rampy65 3 года назад +2

      Don't shutter your mind to new possibilities.

  • @sergiomendez9231
    @sergiomendez9231 Год назад +8

    11:05 The resolution/fidelity of the daguerreotype is absolutely incredible! I guess that's because you can fit A LOT of silver molecules within the small plate!
    17:30 I need to know more about that wheeled contraption in the middle!
    19:10 Love the dog portrait! The fact that someone in the early days of photography over a century ago wanted a portrait of their dog just as pet lovers do today is fantastic!
    31:56 Why would you choose those as your subjects?...
    32:38 ...That's why, LOL

    • @A_nony_mous
      @A_nony_mous 8 месяцев назад +1

      17:30 Another commenter posted that it's called a Rudge Rotary Tricycle and that reproductions are still being made.

    • @sergiomendez9231
      @sergiomendez9231 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@A_nony_mous thank you!

  • @delavan9141
    @delavan9141 3 года назад +28

    Daguerreotypes are so compelling, I want to keep looking at them. The detail is amazing and they seem to reflect life as well as light. I guess that's what gives them a ghostly quality.

    • @renakunisaki
      @renakunisaki 3 года назад +1

      The effect where they turn into a mirror with an image on it is pretty cool too.

  • @monkofmayhem1373
    @monkofmayhem1373 3 года назад +88

    Hello mr. Connections. Everyone has those lists of elite channels in their sub feed that they are genuinely excited to see, so much so that they hold off until they can get a good chill time to watch it. Just wanted you to know that you are one of these channels in my feed, keep up the great work, thanks!

    • @RenoGreens
      @RenoGreens 3 года назад +2

      He is the only channel I actually have notifications turned on for.

    • @pollytheparrot46
      @pollytheparrot46 3 года назад +1

      I almost never even put him on 2x speed.

    • @trashtrash2169
      @trashtrash2169 3 года назад +1

      this, dankpods, idat, and some other tech channels are mine.

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 3 года назад +3

      I feel ya. Sometimes I'm a week late to these videos but it's out of love.

    • @ElDJReturn
      @ElDJReturn 3 года назад +1

      Seriously, TC is definitely something I always save for the right time!

  • @csteinmayer71
    @csteinmayer71 3 года назад +3

    Fantastic! I used to have the whole dark room set up and did quite a lot of B/W photographer in my time. My grandfather was a professional photographer and I got my start using his equipment and cameras. This is fantastic!

  • @esalehtismaki
    @esalehtismaki 3 года назад +22

    Daguerrotypes really look amazing. All development after that made the process easier and cheaper (and less deadly) and viewing less finicky, but sacrificed something in the quality. Even today's digital images can't compete in the number of shades of grey and resolution, at leat on the actual media, forgetting optics. I envy your Ektachrome shirt.

  • @nate_0723
    @nate_0723 3 года назад +22

    Can confirm 120 film is still used today! I use it frequently in my 1951 Rolleicord!

  • @sglynnphoto
    @sglynnphoto Год назад +2

    As a modern tintype photographer this was a fantastic summary! Fun additional info viewers may find interesting: Tintypes in particular take about 1.5 hours from coating the plate to drying the varnish. Exposure times are usually 2-10 seconds with natural light or about 6000w/s of strobe at 3-5 ft is usually enough for a good exposure. Because it’s a UV sensitive process so colors appear differently such as reds getting much darker, blues getting much lighter (wood looks black, blue jeans look almost white, freckles look very distinct, blue eyes look almost completely white). Tattoos often almost disappear or sometimes so disappear because they’re under the layers of skin that reject UV light. It’s a laborious process that takes a ton of skill,practice, and tons of patience to get consistent long term results. Those that do it well have probably spent hundreds of thousands of hours practicing and studying! It’s such a fun and almost magical process to experience first hand if you ever find the opportunity.

  • @burke615
    @burke615 3 года назад +26

    Wow, just seeing that can at 35:09 sent me instantly back to junior high school (several decades ago.) That process is so simple that our yearbook photography staff - 13 to 15 year olds - developed our own black and white photos in a darkroom in the basement of the school. And now that I'm thinking of it, I can recall the particular smell of the chemicals involved. (I also learned to jimmy the simple lock on the darkroom door with a knife and a library card, but that's another story.)
    The other part that I found a personal connection to was the original Kodak camera, a (leather bound) cardboard camera that you sent in to have developed. When I got married in 1998, we bought a bunch of cardboard cameras for the reception, and left them on all of the tables for our guests' use. They then deposited them on a table as they left, and we took them back to CVS (a US drug store chain that also sold the cameras) to be developed. The only part that differed was that we didn't get the cameras themselves back. I never realized that the basic idea was already about 100 years old at that time!

  • @JohnnoNonno
    @JohnnoNonno 3 года назад +121

    "*not to be confused with Nick collodion*"
    Ah, I see what you did there...

    • @Ichijoe2112
      @Ichijoe2112 3 года назад +3

      They really need to find a way to bring You Can't Do That on Television again.

    • @MrTaxiRob
      @MrTaxiRob 3 года назад +1

      @@Ichijoe2112 I wonder how much money various toy companies made selling "slime"..

    • @Stoney3K
      @Stoney3K 3 года назад +2

      @Les And it even has a very direct connection to photography and later, motion pictures. But that's a subject for a whole new series of videos.

    • @MrMatteNWk
      @MrMatteNWk 3 года назад

      @Les Yes, and coincidentally back then it was also called "Pinwheel"

  • @nosbig98
    @nosbig98 3 года назад +4

    This is a fascinating video. My cousin's ex-husband is a professional photographer who also makes tintypes... I appreciate the deeper understanding of what he does.

  • @sludgefactory241
    @sludgefactory241 3 года назад +35

    "photographically smooth jazz" I swear, watching shit with the subtitles on all these years has allowed me to stumble upon some lil comedic gems of text

  • @AndrewBehm
    @AndrewBehm 3 года назад +66

    As a “possible hipster” photographer, I knew most of this already, but I watched the whole thing because your presentation is always great!
    BTW, I still use a 100-year-old Kodak Brownie to this day, the quality is surprisingly good!

    • @samroberts7404
      @samroberts7404 3 года назад +10

      I think there's no possible needed there....

    • @phydeux
      @phydeux 3 года назад +3

      Calling it a surprisingly good 100 year old camera is like saying "horseshit is by far the least offensive shit I've eaten". At the end of the day, you're still eating shit.

    • @lobsterbark
      @lobsterbark 3 года назад +8

      @@phydeux100 year old cameras are often higher resolution than modern pro digital cameras. But the brownie is not one of those cameras. It's literally the early 20th century version of one of those disposable plastic cameras you can still get at a drugstore.
      It's higher quality than the modern disposables, but still not great.

    • @phydeux
      @phydeux 3 года назад +2

      @@lobsterbark - No doubt. I don't have anything against film cameras. In fact, they can do a lot more than digital in the right hands.
      I'm just saying the early brownies and such were one step above prototype stage. So seeing a hipster give it rave reviews is like seeing a 5 star Yelp review for a cow pat.

    • @lobsterbark
      @lobsterbark 3 года назад +4

      @@phydeux A brownie brute forces image quality by having a massive negative. I'd say the resolution is similar to most mid-low-end phone cameras these days. When you consider that people rarely complain that their phone camera is too low resolution, and that brownies have a distinct interesting look to them, it's not surprising people might like them. They make excellent contact prints, which is how they were originally intended to be used.

  • @dawnparsonage5386
    @dawnparsonage5386 3 года назад +5

    Very nicely described, but let’s not forget Fox Talbot the inventor of the negative to positive process in 1839. Daguerre got there first with announcing a useable process, but Talbot with his Calotype was more like the ‘film’ we know now - allowing you to make multiple prints from one negative (be it a paper negative). But you may be coming this in the next film. Loving your work! VERY excited you’re covering photography things!

  • @madjedi2235
    @madjedi2235 3 года назад +334

    Oh my god the subtle jokes throughout this video are hilarious. 24:11 “the arguably *nicer* 6 by 9 cm size” killed me

    • @JakobNorthblood
      @JakobNorthblood 3 года назад +36

      I'm surprised that I missed that one.

    • @jakobbauz
      @jakobbauz 3 года назад +17

      I agree, he delivers this dry humor very well.

    • @NandR
      @NandR 3 года назад +1

      It works so well because 6x9 shots are really nice, almost 4x5 quality.

    • @pvic6959
      @pvic6959 3 года назад +2

      how does he make these jokes without laughing LOL

    • @PieterPatrick
      @PieterPatrick 3 года назад +3

      That Nickelodeon joke.... o.m.g.

  • @mrfoodarama
    @mrfoodarama 3 года назад +22

    I cant wait to see how things Develop!

    • @ananthropomorphictalkinggo6641
      @ananthropomorphictalkinggo6641 3 года назад +7

      Nice

    • @moikkis65
      @moikkis65 3 года назад +4

      He hired you to comment that didn't he.

    • @61rampy65
      @61rampy65 3 года назад +3

      @@moikkis65 Such a Negative attitude.

    • @JoeyRivers
      @JoeyRivers 3 года назад

      Come on with this light hearted humour. One would wonder if the first nude photograph on daguerreotype could be called a double exposure.

  • @DEFGI
    @DEFGI Год назад +1

    I learned more from this video than I did the whole year I learned photography at school. All they taught us was art but using the camera instead of a paint brush, they didn't go into how the camera worked. Well done sir!

  • @lightningdemolition1964
    @lightningdemolition1964 3 года назад +28

    I can't wait to see how the rest of this series develops

    • @EcceJack
      @EcceJack 3 года назад +1

      "develops" - I see what you did there!

    • @Stoney3K
      @Stoney3K 3 года назад +4

      I bet it's going to gain plenty of exposure along the way.

    • @awdrifter3394
      @awdrifter3394 3 года назад +2

      I love to be exposed to more info about films.

  • @Toraxa
    @Toraxa 3 года назад +109

    "Resulted in very insensitive plates, which were quite rude". The puns are out of control today.

  • @johnogilvie3593
    @johnogilvie3593 Год назад +1

    Boy, do you sure know many details about many things. It is amazing that you can fill your brain with all of these many facts..
    Great knowledge..

  • @ojkolsrud1
    @ojkolsrud1 3 года назад +24

    This episode was excellent! I remember I made my first "camera" when I was a kid. Back then, I was a lot smarter than I am now. By chance, I figured out that if you hold a magnifying glass in front of a light source, you could project an image of the lamp or what ever it was, a certain distance behind the magnifying glass. So, I made a hole in a box, and taped the magnifying glass in front of the hole. Directly behind this, I used stove paper (semi transparent paper you put you pizza on when cooking it in the oven. Don't know what it's called in English) as the viewing area. My dad then recognized what I had made - a basic camera obscura. He said that I could put a mirror at 45 degrees in there, and project the image 90 degrees upwards. Now I had sort of the same camera as your Agfa, only without the possibility to take pictures, of course. I had plans to use film or something else in the back, and move the mirror down to take a picture - but being a stupid kid, that plan never came into fruition. Thanks for the walk down memory lane=)

    • @Ravaxr
      @Ravaxr 3 года назад +4

      If it was brown, it was probably parchment paper, and if white it would be wax paper.

  • @photolabguy
    @photolabguy 3 года назад +22

    As a photography nerd, I approve this awesome content. Thank you!

  • @Pandidolod
    @Pandidolod Год назад +11

    Oh my god is the fact that Daguerreotypes were made of silver the reason old vampire legends say they don't show up in photos??

    • @handwriting8804
      @handwriting8804 Месяц назад +1

      If I remember correctly this part of vampire lore actually comes from a specific set of daguerreotypes that are supposed to be of vampires. They’re just floating gloves pretty much.

    • @spener89
      @spener89 15 дней назад

      Yup, and the reason why they didn’t appear in mirrors is that they used to have silver backing!

  • @Kamel419
    @Kamel419 3 года назад +52

    '“Latent image of vaporization." mad respect for how much setup went into this joke lol

    • @jonathangunt8107
      @jonathangunt8107 3 года назад +1

      I sadly do not understand this joke

    • @Kamel419
      @Kamel419 3 года назад +9

      ​@@jonathangunt8107 He has referenced over many of his past videos the latent heat cycle for how HVAC works, so "latent x" has become a bit of an inside joke. He doubled down on it here by taking a literal picture of water being vaporized which makes it a meta joke as well.
      Watch his videos on how AC and heat pumps work for more info.

    • @jonathangunt8107
      @jonathangunt8107 3 года назад

      @@Kamel419 thanks

  • @kubev
    @kubev 3 года назад +10

    You know, I realize that a lot of these early attempts at ANYTHING just seem crazy by today's standards, but it's really impressive to me that any of this stuff was discovered at all. I was recently watching one of your video's about cylinders and records and whatnot, and I just don't understand the sort of thinking that could've ever even gotten close to forming the concepts behind them.

  • @Ventodivino87
    @Ventodivino87 Год назад +9

    I've studied this at photography school. Everything in this video.
    The only difference is that you managed to make this sound interesting and actually got me interested, letting people actually SEE how old cameras used to work instead of just studying it is WAAAAAY better.

  • @williamevans9426
    @williamevans9426 3 года назад +9

    I really love your "old-tech" vlogs, which are easy to understand without being simplistic. Please do keep up the excellent work! With best wishes from Oxford, UK.

  • @jrevillug
    @jrevillug 3 года назад +21

    You've painted a very nice image of the early development of photography.
    Skimming that 1881 patent it does seem like the film was hypothesised as being a likely development.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L 3 года назад +5

      Good for that guy, deciding to patent it for whenever someone makes plates work on a spool.

  • @Jake28
    @Jake28 2 года назад +2

    31:43 Truly, the magic of having two of them prevails.

  • @JohnDCrafton
    @JohnDCrafton 3 года назад +187

    "nick collodion"
    I'm dying

    • @toiletpapermerchant9310
      @toiletpapermerchant9310 3 года назад +2

      have you seen a doctor yet

    • @JohnDCrafton
      @JohnDCrafton 3 года назад +4

      @@toiletpapermerchant9310 it's too late, i died from laughter

    • @lekiflomaster5013
      @lekiflomaster5013 3 года назад +2

      @@toiletpapermerchant9310 I was looking for a man who got that joke, yoh have earned my respect and admiration

    • @purpleldv966
      @purpleldv966 3 года назад +1

      ​@@lekiflomaster5013 Ok, ok... I'm gonna ask... What was the joke?
      And I'm gonna hope that the excuse of me being from Europe will holdout! :)

    • @lekiflomaster5013
      @lekiflomaster5013 3 года назад +5

      @@purpleldv966 aaah yeah, we have a TV channel called nickelodeon, all the kids from like the 80s to now have and still watch it

  • @KyleShields
    @KyleShields 3 года назад +14

    I have an old box camera that has been in my family since 1910 when it was made, I'm usually not the collector type but I have a soft spot for old film cameras. I own about 8, shooting on the Mamiya RB67 or Rolli is my favorite!

    • @gtorell
      @gtorell 3 года назад +1

      You might be surprised how much the value of both of those have shot up in the past year...

    • @KyleShields
      @KyleShields 3 года назад

      @@gtorell Woah! I did a quick search and it looks like RB67’s are going for double what I paid several years ago. I’m glad I picked one up when I did, the all mechanical design of that camera alone is impressive.

  • @Veptis
    @Veptis 2 года назад +3

    I have a pinhole camera from my grandfather. It's a wooden box with a hole and a plate holder for 9x12 dry plates. But even better I have a camera from the 1920s for the same dry plates. I bought some modern dry plates from the US and shot a few - it's such an exciting process to have the image develop in the trays at your fingertips.
    I also managed to find actual plates from the 1910s which might still work. Now I am waiting for the summer to expose them and do some photography with it.

  • @maxbls16
    @maxbls16 3 года назад +49

    “I’m no expert on mid 19th century baby fashion” has been the highlight of my morning.

    • @MrTaxiRob
      @MrTaxiRob 3 года назад +5

      didn't they dress baby boys and girls the same back then?

    • @gutterbones
      @gutterbones 3 года назад +5

      @@MrTaxiRob Not entirely the same, but both wore gowns and generally, boys had fancier hair and ribbons.

    • @MrTaxiRob
      @MrTaxiRob 3 года назад +2

      @@gutterbones what about the wig, does that do anything to identify their sex?

    • @gutterbones
      @gutterbones 3 года назад +1

      @@MrTaxiRob That's a good question, and on that I'm not sure.

    • @phydeux
      @phydeux 3 года назад +2

      That's also the name of my debut album.

  • @robertoXCX
    @robertoXCX 3 года назад +15

    Off and rolling on yet another Technology Connections series. Will it be as riveting as the tale of LaserDisc, Television, or Digital Audio? Or will it be exhaustive and fully encompassing as the tale of the CED?
    Well, I'm ready no matter what!

  • @gravelrhoads
    @gravelrhoads 2 года назад +2

    That is the best description I've ever heard for camera obscura. I never could quite grasp it before, but your example of moving your head in relation to the bigger hole finally clicked for me. Thank you!

  • @pufthemajicdragon
    @pufthemajicdragon 3 года назад +27

    Also, as much as I loved learning about (and soothingly watching) dishwashers, I'm excited for this deep dive educational series. Reminds me of your early days, but with more hair.

    • @googiegress
      @googiegress 3 года назад +3

      THAT is one chart which will have a definite curve to it over a long enough span of time

  • @--Paws--
    @--Paws-- 3 года назад +15

    I remember from old Quaker Oats box/cans, there used to be instructions to make cameras.

  • @Lethgar_Smith
    @Lethgar_Smith 3 года назад +15

    17:30 That is called a Rudge Rotary Tricycle. They make reproductions of them today. Quite unique.

  • @BartolomeoPestalozzi444
    @BartolomeoPestalozzi444 3 года назад +37

    I recall there was a Goofy cartoon of the "How to" series, namely about how to became an amateur photographer, which amongst other things amusingly played with the way those very Kodak cameras were loaded... Now it makes much more sense (and fun!) to watch 😃

    • @prophetessoftroy
      @prophetessoftroy 3 года назад +1

      That series was the best! (The driving one is probably my favorite though)

  • @germx1488
    @germx1488 3 года назад +7

    My Wife and I had a Tin Type photo taken of us on our anniversary at Oldtown San Diego we love it they did such a good job, Thanks BTW Cas Photos. and thank you TC for explaining the tech behind it

  • @ChrisEllorris
    @ChrisEllorris 2 года назад +1

    I've never fully understood why the aperture had to be such a tiny hole until your pinpoints of light on a screen explanation. Thank you for being you!

  • @kovaxim
    @kovaxim 3 года назад +8

    I adore the bloopers, they're so interesting to watch after the video when you imagine "oh this must have been difficult to remember or maybe even say" and then you hear some basic words being misspoken so you think it's like guessing the lottery numbers.

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 3 года назад

      There an episode of Phineas and Ferb where Doofenschmirtz says the word "quadrant" until it starts to feel like it's not even a word.
      It's a fun experiment to do on your own.