Cliché-Verre: Miniatures on Glass (Unabridged) Cliché-Verre: Miniatures on Glass (Unabridged)

Cliché-Verre: Miniatures on Glass (Unabridged‪)‬

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Publisher Description

Cliché-verre is a technique of etching and painting directly on photographic negatives. The term means “glass negative” in French and is as old as photography itself, dating to the 1840s and earlier. The first successful photographic process involved coating glass plates with light-sensitive chemicals from which reversed (positive) prints could be made. Artists experimented with drawing, etching, and combining images directly on the glass, resulting in fanciful black-and-white prints. But few artists were inspired to develop the idea further until the advent of color photography in the early 20th Century.


The Magic Lantern, long predating photography, was invented by Christiaan Huygens, a Dutch astronomer and physicist, in the 1600s. It is a simple device for projecting images, based upon the centuries-old principles of the “camera obscura” or “darkened room.” When the photographic process evolved to film rather than glass plates, the technology spread. Color film arrived in the 1930s. There were now both film negatives and positives (slides).

GENRE
Non-Fiction
NARRATOR
BAS
Brian Allan Skinner
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
00:36
hr min
RELEASED
2024
25 March
PUBLISHER
Ravens-Wood Press
PRESENTED BY
Audible.co.uk
SIZE
31.7
MB