helenore
Member
While reading through HH Snelling's 1849 History and Practice of the Art of Photography, I came across an interesting section titled "Paper Daguerrotypes" in which the author describes a process developed by Robert Hunt. Paper is soaked in potassium bromide and then sensitized with silver nitrate. After exposure (a "four or five seconds" wet or "two or three minutes" dry) the paper is developed via mercury fumes and fixed with hypo, creating a negative for printing. I cannot find any other reference to this process online, and I am very curious to know more about it. It seems almost like a silver bromide emulsion, with the silver resting inside the paper rather than gelatin. I'm hoping to give it a go as soon as I can get some more KBr. I think it would be best to try and find a way around mercury development as well. I'm assuming either becquerel development or a more mainstream chemical developer would work? I am no chemist though. Does anybody have any other information on this process/who was using it?