- Richard Leach Maddox
Richard Leach Maddox (
August 4 ,1816 –May 11 ,1902 ) was an Englishphotographer andphysician who invented lightweightgelatin negative plates forphotography in 1871.The
Collodion process had been invented in 1851 byFrederick Scott Archer . As a result, images required only 2 - 3 seconds of lightexposure . But plates had to be sensitized at the time of exposure and processed immediately.When he noticed that his health was being affected by the 'wet' collodion's
ether vapor, he started looking for a substitute. He suggested in an 1871British Journal of Photography article that sensitizing chemicalscadmium bromide andsilver nitrate should be coated on a glass plate in gelatin, a transparent substance used for making candies. EventuallyCharles Bennett made the first gelatin dry plates for sale; before long theemulsion could be coated oncelluloid roll film .The advantages of the dry plate were obvious: photographers could use commercial dry plates off the shelf instead of having to prepare their own emulsions in a mobile
darkroom . Negatives did not have to be developed immediately. Also, for the first time, cameras could be made small enough to be hand-held, or even concealed.While he did not patent the process, and died in poverty, Maddox received the
Royal Photographic Society 's Progress Medal in 1901.See also
*
Timeline of photography technology
*History of the camera External links
* [http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/DSphotodry5E1.htm 'Dry Plate' Photography]
* [http://www.ephotozine.com/equipment/buyersguide/fullbuyersguide.cfm?buyersguideid=11 Brief history of film]
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