he said something like in the 1800s there were like 40 different processes
one could make a photograph with ( that were available at the same time ) ...
and i wonder for how long that was actually true ..
some things went out of vogue and were stopped pretty much ..
like by the 1860s there weren't a lot of people making dags or calotype/salt prints
but there were people making wet plate-stuff and uv exposed prints from wet plate/collodion glass negatives
while there was an overlap for a short period of time between gaslight, pt/pd/planotype, cyanotype, albumen
carbon/gumovers ... by the 1910s a lot of those processes went out of vogue and i ttook masters like john garo in boston
to bring pt/pd gumovers out of the annals of history and back into the light again ... not to say that there weren't stragglers
who continued doing what they were doing, with materials they made themselves ... but it went out of the main stream ..
like the wild west only lasted for a few years, how long did this nirvana of photographic processes exist
when one had 40 processes to choose from ?