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234:. Photography replaced painting almost completely from the 1840s, with fully equipped studios in existence. The photography process was much shorter and simpler compared to painting, in which the subject and even the painter used to suffer. It became relatively easy and cheap to set up a photographic studio, so by the 1870s there were many thousands of portrait studios in Europe and America. Despite this, remarkably few of the studios have survived to this day in a recognisable form.
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was the first means of artificial lighting that allowed to produce sufficient brightness to capture the action of the film. However, this industry developed at a faster rate. With advancement in camera lenses, lighting and other techniques and equipment, studio photography gained hold and it became
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wire, became the new artificial light source. However, not everyone could afford it as they were quite expensive and dangerous. These flashes were also known as 'hot lights' and could have exploded. By 1860s they were in common use in professional studios.
241:' process was introduced in 1840s. With the introduction of calotypes the production of negatives enabled the photographers to print as many copies as customer required, hence strengthening the very base for the studios. In 1850s small portraits called '
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176:. The earliest photographic studios made use of natural daylight to create photographic portraits. As already used by artists, a northern light with no direct sunlight was favoured.
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People tried many things from time to time when setting up studios to cope up with different hurdles in photography. However, lighting was a big hurdle.
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The history of photographic studios and photography dates back to the 1840s with the invention of processes for recording camera pictures, by
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Since the early years of the 20th century the business functions of a photographic studio have increasingly been called a
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Lights' or 'Hot Lights' were still in use. Around the 1870s even smaller studios got access to flash lights or
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to photograph very small objects. Limelight was produced by placing a piece of lime into a flame fuelled with
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191:. Photographic studios started using flashes in 1840 and in 1864 the next technological breakthrough,
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leaving the term "photographic studio" to refer almost exclusively to the workspace.
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The first commercial use of photography was in the production of
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is often a business owned and represented by one or more
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Studio arrangement for product photography and video.
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286:A photography studio in Ontario, Canada (c. 1943).
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141:Stafhell & Kleingrothe photo studio in 1898
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315:"Surviving Victorian photographic studios"
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219:Storefront of an 1850s portrait studio,
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