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Catalog Data

Maker:
Hill, Levi  Search this
Physical Description:
copper (overall material)
Measurements:
overall: 6 1/2 in x 8 1/2 in; 16.51 cm x 21.59 cm
Object Name:
photograph
Hillotype
Photography
Date made:
1850-1860
Description (Brief):
The Photographic History Collection at the National Museum of American History holds an extraordinary series of early color photographs: sixty-two color daguerreotype plates made by Rev. Levi L. Hill in the early 1850s in Westkill, Greene County, New York. This is the world's largest collection of Heliochromy, a rare early color photographic process based on silver chloride.
Hill’s color process was extremely complex, consisting of coating a daguerreotype plate with multiple layers of a compound of different metals that reacted to the different colors in the spectrum. The achievement of inventing a color photographic process in 1850 was even more remarkable since Hill was not trained as a scientist and lived in a very remote area of New York State.
Yet Hill was indisputably an important figure in early history of American photography, an entrepreneur and enthusiastic innovator. He wrote the first, and one of the best, manuals on daguerreotypy, "A Treatise on Daguerreotype" in 1850; and in 1856 he wrote the first manual on color photography, "Treatise on Heliochromy", which includes a description of his experiments and an overview of all the means of chemically producing pictures in natural colors with light.
Among important works by Hill are many daguerreotype photographs of European color prints, and art reproductions such as this image of four birds with captions in German and English.
Location:
Currently not on view
ID Number:
PG.003999.06
Catalog number:
3999.6
Accession number:
125759
See more items in:
Work and Industry: Photographic History
Photography
Hillotypes
Data Source:
National Museum of American History
GUID:
http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746ac-9b49-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:nmah_1349087