The patent issued for the process named Talbotype or Calotype dates from February, 1841. A sheet of paper is first coated with Iodide of Silver by soaking it alternately in Iodide of Potassium and Nitrate of Silver; it is then washed with solution of Gallic Acid containing Nitrate of Silver (sometimes termed Gallo-Nitrate of Silver), by which the sensibility to light is greatly augmented. An exposure in the Camera of some seconds or minutes, according to the brightness of the light, impresses an invisible image, which is brought out by treating the plate with a fresh portion of the mixture of Gallic Acid and Nitrate of Silver employed in exciting.
On the use of Glass Plates to retain Sensitive Films.—The principal defects in the Calotype process are attributable to the coarse and irregular structure of the fibre of paper, even when manufactured with the greatest care, and expressly for Photographic purposes. In consequence of this, the same amount of exquisite definition and sharpness of outline as that resulting from the use of metal plates, cannot be obtained.
We are indebted to Sir John Herschel for the first employment of glass plates to receive sensitive Photographic films.
The Iodide of Silver may be retained upon the glass by means of a layer of Albumen or white of egg, as proposed by M. Niépce de Saint-Victor, nephew to the original discoverer of the same name.
A more important improvement still is the employment of "Collodion" for a similar purpose.
Collodion is an ethereal solution of a substance almost identical with Gun-Cotton. On evaporation it leaves a transparent layer, resembling gold-beater's skin, which adheres to the glass with some tenacity. M. Le Grey of Paris originally suggested that this substance might possibly be rendered available in Photography, but our own countryman, Mr. Archer, was the first to carry out the idea practically. In a communication to 'The Chemist' in the autumn of 1851, this gentleman gave a description of the Collodion process much as it now stands; at the same time proposing the substitution of Pyro-gallic acid for the Gallic acid previously employed in developing the image.
At that period no idea could have been entertained of the stimulus which this discovery would render to the progress of the Art; but experience has now abundantly demonstrated, that, as far as all qualities most desirable in a Photographic process are concerned, none at present known can excel, or perhaps equal, the Collodion process.