Posted 11 years ago
rniederman
(346 items)
Here is an example of a broadside (advertising poster) for a Connecticut based daguerreotypist by the name of E.S. Hayden. I am posting this as a follow on to Perry’s (Signaholic) question about photographers making money during the early years. Although broadsides of this era are generally quite rare, years ago a well known photographic dealer came upon a stash of 'new old stock' of Hayden’s advertisements for Daguerreotype Miniatures. (Ironically, I have two of these.)
The key to potential profitability was announcing the pending arrival of the photographer ahead of his (or her) visit to drum up business. Notice that the location where Hayden would be residing and working has yet to be filled in. As such, it was economical to have blank broadsides made up; and they are highly sought after by collectors.
By today's standards, a nicely processed daguerreotype is unmatched for its tonal delicacy. Each image reversed left-to-right and is unique because there is no negative. The images are also very fragile. The process of making plates and processing is quite involved and uses dangerous chemistry (such as mercury that is heated to ‘fume’ – make vapors). Even in a studio, a busy photographer needed assistants to help out.
Thanks, vetraio50!
Thanks, LeahGoodwin!
Got one too rob!
I like early photographic ephemera.
scott
Scott ... very good! Thanks.
I have a later cabinet card version by another photog.
I'll post another day.
scott
Amazing that it survived all those years till found by someone that knew the importance/value of them. If I read the other post correctly this dates from the late 1850's to early 1860's?
Thanks, David. And agreed that it is rare for the right person to find something like this; otherwise all would have been tossed into the garbage. It's a common theme with other collectables as well; for example, Ben Marks wrote about the discovery of a cache of unknown Guinness advertising art canvases. All it takes is one sharp-eyed person to keep history intact! This broadside dates to c.1850.
http://www.roycroftbooks.org/velostigmat_lenses_db.htm
Rob-- here is a link to the photographer broadside/ handbill I just posted:
http://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/102332-photographers-advertising-broadside-or-h?in=activity
scott
Thanks, Sean!
Thanks, blunderbuss2!
Thanks, aghcollect!
Thanks, officialfuel!
Thanks, ho2cultcha!
Thanks, Eric!
Thanks, David!
Thanks, petey!
Thanks, Roycroftbooks!
Thanks, kerry10456!
Thanks, f64imager!
Well that clears up a lot. These guys would advertise once arriving at the town, in the local hotels and businesses?
Thanks, Perry! And yes ... you are correct. Not much different than the rock posters Ben Marks has posted here. Then again, old photographer broadsides aren't nearly as cool looking.
And I'm sure almost impossible to find as well.