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from the group: Chromogenic

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Pre-photographic

Photomechanical

Photographic

Albumen
Ambrotype
Bromoil
Bromoil Transfer
Carbon
Carbro
Chromogenic
Collodion POP
Cyanotype
Daguerreotype
Direct Carbon (Fresson)
Dye Imbibition
Gelatin Dry Plate
Gelatin POP
Gum Dichromate
Instant (Diffusion Transfer)
Instant (Dye Diffusion Transfer)
Instant (Internal Dye Diffusion Transfer)
Matte Collodion
Platinum
Salted Paper
Screen Plate
Silver Dye Bleach
Silver Gelatin DOP
Tintype
Wet Plate Collodion

Digital

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Notes on this view:

This photograph was made for artistic purposes and measures 11x14 inches, a standard paper size. In 1942 Kodak introduced the first negative film and print material called Kodacolor. The commercial popularity of the process as well as image stability increased over the next several decades and by the mid-1960s chromogenic materials overtook gelatin silver black and white materials on the amateur market. Although chromogenic was the dominant color process of the 20th century, it wasn’t until the mid-1970s that the process began to be used by artists and was accepted into the art market. Chromogenic papers subsequently became a popular choice for artists from the 1980s until today.