I love looking at
period photographs. So often you see faces that tell a story, ones
that make you laugh, ones that make you cry. The daguerreotype with
the assistant gently pushing the toddler back in to view, the hidden
mother who is under a tablecloth to stay out of view, the dandy with
his enormously large hat, or the sad pre-mortem taken as a memento
for the loved ones left behind.
Such a cutie
Photo of Lucy Crouse- Crouse Series Greene
Connections: Greene County, Pennsylvania Photo Archives Project in
2005
Family Portrait: Parents with Their Three Children,
c. 1850- Smith College Museum of Art
These images also hold
a huge wealth of costume information. One major benefit compared to
the other inspirations I have (or that will be) listed are that these
are real clothes on real people.
Big Eyed Beauty 1/6 Plate daguerreotype c.1850s - mirrorimagegallery flickr
Museum of Photographic Arts collections - 1855
There are of course the odd
exceptions; staged shots in costume, fancy dress and satirical
images, or occasionally you will see an ill fitting dress where lady
has borrowed an item from the photographers wardrobe. Unlike fashion
plates that show you the ideal of what people will be wearing during
a certain year, photographs will show you the actuality of what was
being worn.
Mr and Mrs Iltide Thomas c.1850s - LIGC National Library of Wales
Portrait of a family 1855 - Museum of Photographic Arts Collections
I particularly like generational photos that often show
the difference between the younger generation and their forebears.
Family portrait - George Eastman House Collection
This is another benefit of photographs against
fashion plates, in photographs you can find people from different
socio-economic backgrounds and of all ages.
Mrs Fisher (1784 -1868) wife of Archibald Fisher, a labourer and carter from Rothesay c.1848
Newhaven fisherwomen, Jeanie Wilson and Annie Linton 1845 - University of Glasgow Library
Fashion plates tend to
focus on the teens to twenties females, with a plentiful sprinkling
of children, occasionally babies, very rarely toddlers (having a two
year old myself I've had great difficulty in finding fashion plates
with children in the 2-4 year bracket), and I can't think of a single
fashion plate where I have seen someone who could have been
considered of advancing years. Men's fashion plates, though
existing, are also not particularly plentiful.
Victorian Family - mirrorimagegallery flickr
I love all the little details in this daguerreotype. The jewellery (especially on the girl), belt, whitework sleeves & collar, lace mits, headdress, satin waistcoat. Also like that the lady is wearing her glasses, which in quite unusual for a portrait of this era.
Miss Coddington c.1852 - National Library of Ireland
Of course period
photographs have some shortcomings. The first known photograph of a
human wasn't taken until 1838 with the first known portrait in 1839,
so you can only research after these dates.
The original daguerreotype boyfriend
Self Portrait of Robert Cornelius- first known portrait photograph 1839
Miss Dorothy Catherine Draper - June 1840
Colour photography only
really took off after 1900, so apart from the occasional hand tinted
image we can only guess at what colours might be lurking in the greys
and black of an image.
Mother and Child Hand Coloured Ambrotype (Collodion Positive) c. 1860
whatsthatpicture - flickr
I wonder if they were originally in matching colours or if there is a little artistic license being applied?
1/6 Plate daguerreotype of either a husband
and wife or brother and sister - Mirrorimagegallery flickr
I really love this image, especially her hair. Can only imagine what colour her dress and ribbons would have been.
Precise dating can also be a problem. While
some photos come with inscriptions that handily give us the date of
an image, and many will have the photographers studio (which will
help narrow down the date to when they were operating), sometimes it
can be difficult to establish a date. I've seen many images of
mature ladies wearing crinolines and adopting older styles well into
the bustle period. Sometimes you will see styles that look as if
they belong to two separate decades, were they ahead of the trend in
some respects, or only just adopting a style that was already
established? And sometimes you will just see something unique, in an
era filled with hand-made garments you will see flashes of ingenuity,
artistry, flair and the little hand finished touches that we still
love in hand made items today.
1/6 plate daguerreotype- mirrorimagegallery
I adore this bonnet with its decorative velvet ribbons and the way the feathers create an aurora round her.
Quarter-plate
daguerreotype (3.25 x 4.25 inches) circa
1853 - the American museum of photography
Beautiful bonnet trim and zigzag fichu
Unidentified woman, with jewelry woven into hair - Missouri History Museum
Absolutely stunning
There are many sources
of period photos online. A general google search of any of the
following terms should bring up a plethora of images : daguerreotype,
tintype, ambrotype, calotype, CDV.
And I shall leave you with one of my all time favourites.....
Proud Mother and Laughing Infant, 9th-Plate Ambrotype, Circa 1860
lisby1 - flickr
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