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from the group: Gelatin Dry Plate

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Pre-photographic

Photomechanical

Photographic

Albumen
Ambrotype
Bromoil
Bromoil Transfer
Carbon
Carbro
Chromogenic
Collodion POP
Cyanotype
Daguerreotype
Direct Carbon (Fresson)
Dye Imbibition
Gelatin Dry Plate
Gelatin POP
Gum Dichromate
Instant (Diffusion Transfer)
Instant (Dye Diffusion Transfer)
Instant (Internal Dye Diffusion Transfer)
Matte Collodion
Platinum
Salted Paper
Screen Plate
Silver Dye Bleach
Silver Gelatin DOP
Tintype
Wet Plate Collodion

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Notes on this view:

This 1920 gelatin dry plate, measuring 5 x 7 inches, was made by a professional studio photographer. Gelatin dry plate was the most popular negative process between the 1880s and 1910s when it began to be displaced by flexible film. It was used to print all the major photographic printing processes of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Gelatin dry plate remained popular into the 1920s.