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The First Photograph: Daguerre's Minutes-Long Exposure That Froze Time

March 28, 2026 · 4 min read

The Fact

The first photograph (a daguerreotype) was created by Louis Daguerre in 1839 with an exposure time of several minutes.

Before the Daguerreotype

The idea of using light to create an image is ancient — the camera obscura, a darkened box or room with a small aperture that projects an inverted image of the outside world onto an interior surface, had been known since at least the eleventh century and was widely used by Renaissance artists to assist in accurate rendering. The problem was that the projected image was ephemeral: it disappeared the moment the light changed, and recording it required a human hand to trace what the light displayed.

The challenge of finding a chemical substance that would darken in response to light, and of fixing that darkening permanently so that the image did not continue to react and eventually turn uniformly black, occupied several generations of experimenters. Nicéphore Niépce, a French inventor, produced the earliest surviving photograph around 1826 or 1827 — a view from an upstairs window that required an exposure of several hours and produced an image of limited quality. Niépce entered a partnership with Louis Daguerre, a theatrical designer and showman who had built a successful public entertainment called the Diorama using large, carefully lit painted scenes. Niépce died in 1833, but Daguerre continued experimenting and arrived at a different and far more sensitive process.

How the Daguerreotype Process Worked

The daguerreotype was a direct positive process — it produced a unique, unreproducible image on a silver-coated copper plate. The plate was first polished to a mirror finish, then sensitized by exposure to iodine vapors, which reacted with the silver surface to form silver iodide. The sensitized plate was placed in a camera and exposed to light for a period ranging from a few seconds in bright sunlight to twenty minutes or more in diffuse light — an exposure time that made portraiture challenging but possible. After exposure, the plate was developed by exposure to mercury vapors, which condensed on the areas that had received light and formed a silver-mercury amalgam. The image was then fixed by washing in sodium thiosulfate solution (later) or salt water (initially) to dissolve the remaining unexposed silver iodide and prevent further reactions.

The result was an image of extraordinary fineness and tonal range — a daguerreotype could resolve detail invisible to the naked eye, and the images had a luminous, three-dimensional quality unlike anything else available. The process was announced to the French Academy of Sciences on January 7, 1839, by physicist François Arago, with Daguerre named as the inventor. The French government immediately purchased the rights and declared the process a gift to the world, freely available to all.

The Famous Empty Boulevards

The long exposure times required by early daguerreotypes had a striking visual consequence. A photograph of the Boulevard du Temple in Paris, taken by Daguerre himself in 1838 and considered one of the earliest surviving photographs of human beings, appears to show an almost entirely empty street — despite the boulevard being one of the busiest in Paris. Every person walking, every carriage moving, every vendor going about their business was in motion and thus moved through the frame too quickly to register. Only two figures remained still long enough to appear: a man having his boots polished, standing motionless while the boot-black worked, and the boot-black himself, bending over his customer. They are the earliest photographed humans, preserved not because they were interesting but because they were still.

The World Transformed by Portraiture

The cultural impact of accessible photography was profound and immediate. Before 1839, only the wealthy could commission a painted portrait; the cost of engaging a skilled artist placed realistic personal likenesses beyond the reach of most people. Photography democratized the portrait. By the 1840s, daguerreotype portrait studios were operating in cities across Europe and North America, and ordinary working people could afford to have their likenesses recorded for the first time in history. Photography changed how people related to their own appearances, to memory, to evidence, and ultimately to truth — the photographic image carried an authority that a painting, however skillful, could never quite claim. The world Daguerre photographed from his Paris window in the 1830s had no way of knowing what it was beginning.

F

FactOTD Editorial Team

Published March 28, 2026 · 4 min read

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