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HomeContents > People > Photographers > Walter B. Woodbury

Names:
Born: Walter Bentley Woodbury 
Other: Walter Woodbury 
Joint: Woodbury & Page 
Dates:  1834, 26 June - 1885, 5 September
Born:  Great Britain, England, Manchester
Died:  Great Britain, England, Margate
Active:  Great Britain / Java / Australia
 
  
Walter Bentley Woodbury, inventor of the Woodburytype photomechanical printing process, was born in Manchester, England on 26 June 1834. He early showed a scientific bent, and as a youth mastered the difficult wet-collodion process soon after the working details were published in 1851.
 
On hearing of the gold discoveries in Australia he resigned his apprenticeship as an engineering draughtsman and arrived in Melbourne in October 1852 but because of a temporary lull in gold finds, he took whatever jobs he could get. As an amateur he was one of the earliest wet-plate photographers in Australia, and won a medal at the 1854 Melbourne Exhibition. Then, realising that the wet-plate process was quickly displacing daguerreotypes he decided to turn professional. He worked for a time as an operator with P.M. Batchelder‘s Melbourne studio, and for a time had his own studio. A versatile photographer, he took panoramas and stereo photographs as well as portraits and conventional views.
 
In 1857 Woodbury, with associate James Page, migrated to Java. After Woodbury had solved the problem of using the collodion process under tropical conditions their business became highly successful. In addition to their commissioned work they travelled the country taking photographs for sale. Woodbury‘s stereo views when published in London were favourably reviewed in the British Journal of Photography.
 
Shortly after returning to England in 1863 he devoted himself to solving the serious problems which were inhibiting the sale of photographic books - the slow production rate of albumen prints and their tendency to fade. He moved from silver-based chemistry to the permanent but imperfect dichromate-based carbon process of Alphonse Poitevin, the main shortcoming of which was the poor rendering of half-tones. After much arduous work Woodbury solved the problem of rendering half-tones correctly, for which he was granted British Patent No.2338 of 1864.
 
Briefly, his process involved making a matrix in which each tone was represented by the thickness of hardened bichromated gelatin. From this an intaglio was prepared by electrolysis. From the intaglio the print was made in warm pigmented gelatin in what was essentially a casting operation using a press of his own invention. Two years later he perfected the process by replacing the electrolysis step with a procedure in which the hardened gelatin matrix was forced into a sheet of lead under high pressure. Prints were then cast from the resulting lead mould. The salient feature of the Woodburytype printing process was that it was suitable for high production rates of high quality images whilst avoiding the use of introduced grain or the half-tone screen. The half-tones and delicate detail were reproduced smoothly and precisely by the varying thicknesses of pigmented gelatin.
 
To publicise his process Woodbury himself printed several thousand images for an insert in The Photographic News of January 26, 1866. In 1875 he produced a photo-book "Treasure Spots of the World" as a demonstration of the superb quality of well-made Woodburytype reproductions. Although the cost of the equipment put Woodburytype out of the reach of small operators, it became the process of choice for high quality illustrated books as well as being equally suited to the mass production of ephemeral items such as cartes-de-visite of stage personalities, to be given away as advertising material. In one notable instance 30,000 CDVs were made in a single day. Woodbury licensed the process in several countries. It was also adapted successfully for the production of lantern slides in large quantities.
 
Described as technically perfect and the most beautiful printing process ever invented, it was, however, not without its problems. The afterwork on the prints was labour-intensive as each sheet had to be treated in an alum bath, washed, dried, trimmed and mounted. A further shortcoming was that the prints could not be combined with letterpress.
 
In 1879 Woodbury patented the simplified Stannotype process which did not require the expensive lead moulding press but it found little acceptance. Woodburytype was highly successful until the 1890s when it was replaced by cheaper but inferior processes.
 
Woodbury was a prolific and versatile inventor, holding more than twenty patents, ranging from improvements to optical lanterns to photography from a balloon. He was awarded many honours including a gold medal at the 1872 Moscow Polytechnic Exposition and the 1883 Progress Medal of The Royal Photographic Society
 
Although widely acknowledged and respected, Wooodbury lacked the business acumen needed to capitalise on his inventions. He contracted diabetes and died a poor man on 5 September 1885 at Margate, England.
 
His fame is assured by the legacy of superb prints made by the process which bears his name. Time has proved that the claim to permanence of Woodburytype prints was entirely justified. The beauty of Woodburytype prints made over a century ago, astounds us today.
 
[Contributed by Alan F. Elliott]

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Walter B. Woodbury
Self portrait with camera 
1857
 
  
Family history 
  
If you are related to this photographer and interested in tracking down your extended family we can place a note here for you to help. It is free and you would be amazed who gets in touch. 
  
alan@luminous-lint.com
 
  
 
  

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Supplemental information

 

Walter Bentley Woodbury

Researchers should note that the letters he wrote to his mother from Australia and Java over the period 1852 to 1857 have been fully transcribed and a DTP version was published in 1998. A second edition with illustrations and expanded notes is being planned. A biography of Woodbury is also in preparation.
 
For those wishing to locate a portrait of Walter Bentley Woodbury the following sources have been suggested by Alan F. Elliott.
  • A so-called "Self-portrait with camera", as a young man probably taken in Batchelder's studio in Melbourne about 1855. The original is held by the Royal Photographic Soctiety (RPS).
  • A portrait by the Stannotype process circa 1880 is held by the Science Museum London.
  • A portrait in the Supplement to the British Journal of Photography 14 March 1884.
  • A portrait late in life reproduced by Ive's photo-relief process (a Woodburytype variant) published in A Guide to Art Illustration. This portrait was taken late in life when he was in declining health.
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    Internet biographies

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    Wikipedia has a biography of this photographer. Go to website
    Getty Research, Los Angeles, USA has an ULAN (Union List of Artists Names Online) entry for this photographer. This is useful for checking names and they frequently provide a brief biography. Go to website
     

    Printed biographies

    The following books are useful starting points to obtain brief biographies but they are not substitutes for the monographs on individual photographers.

     
    • Capa, Cornell (ed.) 1984 The International Center of Photography: Encyclopedia of Photography (New York, Crown Publishers, Inc. - A Pound Press Book) p.566 
      
     
      
     
      
     
      
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