Using the daguerreotype process, John Benjamin Dancer was one of the first to produce microphotographs, in 1839.
Theophilus began to experiment with photography soon after the daguerreotype process was invented in 1839, many of the photographs he took at the house survive today.
Although the daguerreotype process could only produce a single image at a time, copies could be created by re-daguerreotyping the original, although this proved difficult.
The French Academy of Sciences announced the daguerreotype process on January 9, 1839.
This process had the advantage that it produced negatives unlike the daguerreotype process.
Southworth & Hawes worked almost exclusively in the daguerreotype process.
"Stereoview" cards were first commonly made using the daguerreotype process in the early 1850s.
Working with the awkward daguerreotype process, photographers could not create pictures of the battlefield dead or wounded.
Franz was the first lecturer on the daguerreotype process in Moravia.
Delaroche encouraged the use of photography as research for painting; Nègre started with the daguerreotype process before moving on to calotypes.