Invention of photography – Gelatin Silver Process and Gelatin Silver Prints

Gelatin Silver Process

Gelatin Silver Process and Gelatin Silver Prints – Invention of Photography 7,32 min video created by George Eastman House.

The gelatin silver process was introduced at the end of the nineteenth century and dominated black-and-white photography in the twentieth century.

The paper or film used to make gelatin silver prints and negatives is coated with an emulsion that contains gelatin and silver salts.

Gelatin silver prints and negatives are developed out rather than printed out, which means that exposure to light registers a latent image that becomes visible only when developed in a chemical bath.

This process requires shorter printing times than earlier printed-out processes such as salted paper prints and albumen prints. George Eastman’s introduction of flexible roll film and the Brownie camera revolutionized photographic practice and industry, putting photography into the hands of the masses for the first time.

This process is responsible for all the black and white, color and motion pictures produced in the 20th century with analog materials.

(This video is made possible by a grant from the U.S. Institute of Museum and Library Services, grant number MA-10-13-0194.)
George Eastman House, an independent nonprofit museum, is an educational institution that tells the story of photography and motion pictures—media that have changed and continue to change our perception of the world.