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Unidentified photographer (American) 
[Amateur Snapshot Album] 
1890-1892 
  
Cyanotypes 
28.3 x 36.8 x 2.8 cm (11 1/8 x 14 1/2 x 1 1/8 ins) 
  
Metropolitan Museum of Art 
Funds from various donors, 1997, Accession Number: 1997.54 
  
 
LL/79871 
  
Curatorial description (Accessed: 10 January 2018)
The Kodak Number One camera, first marketed in 1888, made photography a viable hobby for even the least technically inclined. Pre-loaded with film, its shutter fixed at one speed and focal range at one setting, and innocent of even the crudest viewfinder, the "detective" camera prompted millions to translate their daily experience into pictures. "Snapshots"-a marksman's term denoting a spontaneous shot at a moving target-became the common coin of memory; the photo album, formerly filled with commercial views and studio portraits, became a lively visual diary reflecting the events and affinities of a unique life. One such album from Corning, New York, chronicles a youthful fondness for the pets Max and Fritz, the popular new hobby of candid sidewalk portraiture, and a backyard treehouse folly called "The Roost." These prints are homemade cyanotypes, or blueprints-a relatively simple and permanent process employing iron salts that dates from photography's earliest days. 
 

 
  
 
  
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