Abel_Niépce_de_Saint-Victor

Astro datetime
Timezone
0.32
    Radix

    Claude Félix Abel Niépce de Saint-Victor (26 July 1805, Saint-Cyr, Saône-et-Loire – 7 April 1870, Paris) was a French photographic inventor. Claude was an army lieutenant and the cousin of Nicéphore Niépce. He first experimented in 1847 with negatives made with albumen on glass, a method subsequently used by Frederick Langenheim for his and his brother’s lantern slides. At his laboratory near Paris, Saint-Victor worked on the fixation of natural photographic colour as well as the perfection of his cousin's heliographing process for photomechanical printing. His method of photomechanical printing, called heliogravure, was published in 1856 in Traité pratique de gravure héliographique. In the 1850s, he also published frequently in La Lumière.

    adb_sbdate_dmy
    20 July 1805
    adb_sbtime
    08:00
    adb_sroddenrating
    AA
    adb_BirthCountry
    France
    adb_place
    Saint-Cyr
    adb_sctr
    FR
    adb_csex
    m
    adb_sdatasource
    Quoted BC/BR
    adb_stimeacc
    Undetermined
    adb_TimeAccuracyCode
    Undetermined
    adb_ccalendar
    g
    adb_pageid
    102800
    adb_BirthName
    Claude Félix Abel Niépce de Saint-Victor
    LocalSpace map