Calotype — or talbotype is an early photographic process introduced in 1841 by Henry Fox Talbot, using paper coated with silver iodide. The term calotype comes from the Greek el. κάλο for good , and el. τύπος for impression . How calotypes work The… … Wikipedia
CALOTYPE — Le calotype (du grec kalos , beau) est le nom forgé par W. H. F. Talbot pour désigner le procédé de photographie sur papier qu’il achève de mettre au point en 1840. Talbot en découvre le principe fondamental le système négatif positif toujours… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Calotype — Ne doit pas être confondu avec callitype. Image par calotype de William Henry Fox Talbot Le calotype (du grec kalos, beau et typos, impression), ou calotypie, est … Wikipédia en Français
calotype — noun Etymology: Greek kalos beautiful + type (as in daguerreotype) Date: 1845 a photographic process by which a large number of prints could be produced from a paper negative; also a positive print so made … New Collegiate Dictionary
calotype — /kal euh tuyp /, n. 1. an early negative positive photographic process, patented by William Henry Talbot in 1841, in which a paper negative is produced and then used to make a positive contact print in sunlight. 2. a print made by this process.… … Universalium
calotype — noun A talbotype … Wiktionary
CALOTYPE — a process of photography invented by Fox Talbot in 1840, by means of the action of light on nitrate of silver … The Nuttall Encyclopaedia
calotype — n. talbotype, photographic procedure in which the paper plate is sensitized with silver iodide … English contemporary dictionary
calotype — An early photographic process, it was patented in 1840 by William H.F. Talbot (English, 1800 1877), the first process to employ a negative to produce a positive image on paper. Also known as Talbotype … Glossary of Art Terms
calotype — cal·o·type … English syllables