Showing 5 items
matching opalotype photography
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Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Opalotype - portrait Thomas Must, W. Cornish, n.d
... opalotype photography hand coloured tint portrait photography Front ...Portland Town CouncilHand-coloured photograph on glass of an elderly man with white hair parted on the left and a full white beard. He is wearing a dark suit, white shirt and blue cravat. Mounted in brown matt, under glass in wooden (birds-eye?) frame with inner gold frame.Front: Thomas Must, Esq./1864-6- (black text on brass plaque).opalotype, photography, hand coloured, tint, portrait photography -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Ephemera - Opalotype portrait of Henry Frenchman
... Opalotype Photography... and Mason Opalotype Photography Photographic head and shoulders ...Henry Frensham was mentioned in the 1980 Select Legislative Assembly of the Colony of Victoria that was established to consider who first found gold in Bendigo. In his book "The Gold Rush That Never Ended", Geoffrey Blainey said Henry, Frencham a journalist in a red shirt and knee boots, using a nom-de-plume "Bendigo" announced the discovery of gold. He also claimed to have had a major role in the demonstration at Bendigo against the new three pound gold licence fee. In 1854 the Government charged the miners this fee and the miners started to rebel. Frisby & Mason Photography was located at 134 Bridge Road Richmond and was first listed there in 1887.Photographic head and shoulders portrait of a grey-haired man with a grey mustache wearing a dark grey coat and a white shirt with a black tie. Highlighted in a dark cream coloured oval on a light cream coloured background. It's signed Frisby& Mason.henry frencham, first gold discovery, frisby and mason, opalotype photography -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Photograph - opalotype, Thomas Must Esq, n.d
... accommodation centre. photography opalotype Thomas Must Front ...Possibly Portland Town Council. Thomas Must, a wealthy Sydney merchant arrived in Portland in 1845. In 1855 prospect was built for Must to a design by local architect George Mathewson. The two storey home was built in expansive grounds with sweeping views of Portland Bay and the township. The stuccoed house is of Regency/Italianate style with a single storey verandah and single storey kitchen wing. In 1878 the original posted verandah was replaced by new verandah and a conservatory to a design of architect Daniel Nicholson. Nicholson had also been responsible for the design of the Assembly Rooms at the London Inn. Thomas Must was active in the Portland Community. He was a Trustee of the Port Philip Savings Bank, a Justice of the Peace, Treasurer of St. Peters Church at Bridgewater and the first Chairman of the Portland Borough Council. Prospect was Thomas Must’s home until his death in 1905. The building has been considerably altered over the years and much of the original Italianate character has been lost. Subsequent owners include B. Cunningham, G.S. Beresford (who changed the property’s name to Waterford), and long-term Liberal Senator Sir Magnus Cormack. Cormack was President of the Senate from 1971 to 1974. In 1976 the Prospect became an aged accommodation centre.Wooden Frame - light brown. Gold inner frame. Fawn mount. Man with long white beard and hair facing right wearing dark jacket. Front: (no inscriptions) Back: (no inscriptions)photography, opalotype, thomas must -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Photograph - Mr H. Sutton, n.d
... technique of photography. Opalotypes were printed on sheets... technique of photography. Opalotypes were printed on sheets ...Portland Town Council. Opalotype or opaltype is an early technique of photography. Opalotypes were printed on sheets of opaque, translucent white glass; early opalotypes were sometimes hand-tinted with colors to enhance their effect. The effect of opalotype has been compared "to watercolor or even pastel in its softer coloring and tender mood."[1] "Opalotype portraits...for beauty and delicacy of detail, are equal to ivory miniatures."[2] The basic opalotype technique, involving wet collodion and silver gelatin, was patented in 1857 by Glover and Bold of Liverpool. Opalotypes exploited two basic techniques, using either the transfer of a carbon print onto glass, or the exposure of light-sensitive emulsion on the glass surface to the negative. Opalotype photography, never common, was practiced in various forms until it waned and disappeared in the 1930s. "Milk glass positive" is another alternative term for an opalotype. Opalotype is one of a number of early photographic techniques now generally consigned to historical status, including ambrotype, autochrome, cyanotype, daguerrotype, ivorytype, kallitype, orotone, and tintype. This and many other historical photographic methods are now considered alternative photographic techniques and are practised by a small number of dedicated artists.Monochrome portrait photograph of a man in a three piece suit. He has a patterned tie on and wears a medallion on his right lapel. He is clean shaven. Yellowish halo around the figure. Opalotype.Front: Br _______/Melb. (Signature, pencil, lower right)mr sutton, sutton, opalotype, portland town council -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Photograph - Opalotype photograph, H.E. Brewer, Esq, c. 1880
Frame - Golden timber/mottled. Inner frame - Gold embossed. Mount - Maroon flecked cardboard. Male - Facing front Black open jacket/button holes on lapel/vest. White shirt and black button. Full beard. Receding hair line. Background - white and greyFront: H.E. Brewer. Esq. M.D. 1866.portrait photography, portrait, photography, civic photography