The ambrotype, also known as a collodion positive in the
UK, is a positive photograph on glass made by a variant of the
wet plate collodion process. As a cheaper alternative to the French
daguerreotype, ambrotypes came to replace them. Like a print on paper, it is viewed by reflected light. Like the
daguerreotype or the prints produced by a
Polaroid camera, each is a unique original that could only be duplicated by using a camera to copy it.
The ambrotype was introduced in the 1850s. During the 1860s it was superseded by the
tintype, a similar photograph on thin black-lacquered iron, hard to distinguish from an ambrotype if under glass.
The term ''ambrotype'' comes from ''ambrotos'', "immortal", and ''typos'', "impression".
Process
One side of a clean glass plate was coated with a thin layer of
iodized
Iodised salt (American and British English spelling differences#-ise, -ize (-isation, -ization), also spelled iodized salt) is Salt#Edible salt, table salt mixed with a minute amount of various iodine salts. The ingestion of iodine prevents iod ...
collodion, then dipped in a
silver nitrate solution. The plate was
exposed in the camera while still wet. Exposure times varied from five to sixty seconds or more depending on the brightness of the lighting and the
speed
In kinematics, the speed (commonly referred to as ''v'') of an object is the magnitude of the change of its position over time or the magnitude of the change of its position per unit of time; it is thus a non-negative scalar quantity. Intro ...
of the camera lens. The plate was then
developed and fixed. The resulting
negative, when viewed by reflected light against a black background, appears to be a positive image: the clear areas look black, and the exposed, opaque areas appear relatively light. This effect was integrated by backing the plate with black velvet; by taking the picture on a plate made of dark reddish-colored glass (the result was called a ruby ambrotype); or by coating one side of the plate with black
varnish. Either the emulsion side or the bare side could be coated: if the bare side was blackened, the thickness of the glass added a sense of depth to the image. In either case, another plate of glass was put over the fragile emulsion side to protect it, and the whole was mounted in a metal frame and kept in a protective case. In some instances the protective glass was cemented directly to the emulsion, generally with a
balsam resin. This protected the image well but tended to darken it. Ambrotypes were sometimes hand-tinted; untinted ambrotypes are
monochrome, gray or tan in their lightest areas.
History
The ambrotype was based on the wet plate
collodion process invented by
Frederick Scott Archer. Ambrotypes were deliberately underexposed
negatives made by that process and optimized for viewing as positives instead.
In the
US, ambrotypes first came into use in the early 1850s. In 1854,
James Ambrose Cutting of Boston took out several patents relating to the process. Although Cutting, the patent holder, had named the process after himself, it appears the term, "ambrotype" itself may have been first coined in the gallery of
Marcus Aurelius Root, a well-known daguerreotypist, as documented in his 1864 book ''The Camera and the Pencil'' as follows:
"After considerable improvements, this process was first introduced, in 1854, into various Daguerrean establishments, in the Eastern and Western States, by Cutting & Rehn. In June of this year, Cutting procured patents for the process, though Langdell had already worked it from the printed formulas.
"The process has since been introduced, as a legitimate business, into the leading establishments of our country. The positive branch of it; i.e. a solar impression upon one glass-plate, which is covered by a second hermetically sealed thereto, is entitled the "Ambrotype," (or the "imperishable picture"), a name devised in my gallery.
Root also states (pp. 373): "Isaac Rehn, formerly a successful daguerreotypist, in company with Cutting, of Boston, perfected and introduced through the United States the "Ambrotype," or the positive on glass." What isn't mentioned in the referenced book is the particular year in which the term "ambrotype" was first used.
Ambrotypes were much less expensive to produce than
daguerreotypes, the medium that predominated when they were introduced, and did not have the bright mirror-like metallic surface that could make daguerreotypes troublesome to view and which some people disliked. An ambrotype, however, appeared dull and drab when compared with the brilliance of a well-made and properly viewed daguerreotype.
By the late 1850s, the ambrotype was overtaking the daguerreotype in popularity. In 1858, the New York City Police Department, inspired by the pioneering Criminal Investigation Department in Glasgow, Scotland, used ambrotypes to establish a "rogues' gallery", consisting of portraits of wanted criminals and arrested villains. By the mid-1860s, the ambrotype itself was being replaced by the
tintype, a similar image on a sturdy black-lacquered thin iron sheet, as well as by photographic
albumen paper prints made from glass plate collodion negatives.
Gallery
File:1860 Anonyme Un vétéran et sa femme Ambrotype.jpg, Peninsular War
The Peninsular War (1808–1814) was fought in the Iberian Peninsula by Kingdom of Portugal, Portugal, Spain and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, United Kingdom against the invading and occupying forces of the First French ...
veteran and his wife, c. 1860, with some hand-tinting
File:Cute Blond Boy Glass ambrotype USA.jpg, Cute Blond Boy, c. 1860
File:Charlotte Cushman ambrotype.jpg, American actress Charlotte Cushman, 1859
File:Porträtt av man, sittande med vänstra handen stucken inannför rocken - Nordiska Museet - NMA.0052940 1.jpg, Bare ambrotype plate, c. 1860, showing damage to emulsion and varnish
File:Damporträtt. Porträtt av okänd sittande kvinna. 1800-talets mitt - Nordiska Museet - NMA.0052391 1.jpg, Portrait on oval glass plate, c. 1850s
File:Grand-son of Vice-Admiral Charles John Napier (5570754738).jpg, Boy with elaborately hand-tinted tartan
Tartan or plaid ( ) is a patterned cloth consisting of crossing horizontal and vertical bands in multiple colours, forming repeating symmetrical patterns known as ''setts''. Originating in woven wool, tartan is most strongly associated wi ...
clothing, c. 1860
File:Dr Charles Nathan, surgeon (5570762546).jpg, Stereoscopic portrait of a surgeon, c. 1860
File:Princess Isabel and Leopoldina 1855 frame removed.png, Brazilian princesses Leopoldina and Isabel (seated), 1855
File:Whaler Benjamin Tucker in Honolulu, by Dr. Stangenwald.jpg, Whaling ship in Honolulu harbor, 1857
File:Erika germany.jpg, An example of a modern ambrotype, May 2007
File:Martin Falbisoner - Ambrotype by Steffen Diemer.jpg, Example of a modern ambrotype, 2015
See also
*
Albumen print
Egg white is the clear liquid (also called the albumen or the glair/glaire) contained within an egg. In chickens, it is formed from the layers of secretions of the anterior section of the hen's oviduct during the passage of the egg. It forms aro ...
*
Calotype
*
Collodion process
*
Daguerreotype
*
Tintype
*
Lippmann plate
References
External links
The wetplate collodion process, used to make ambrotypesThe Getty Museum: The Wet Collodion Process{{Webarchive, url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141019053829/http://www.getty.edu/art/gettyguide/videoDetails?cat=2&segid=1726 , date=2014-10-19
Step by Step Wet Plate PhotographyAmbrotypes Collection at the American Antiquarian Society-
Archived 2023
Wet Plate Photographyby
Pamplin Historical Park 2008
1854 introductions
English inventions
Photographic processes dating from the 19th century