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William
Notman (Montreal, Canada 1826-1891) Albumen
print, 4 x 5.5 inches, circa 1866
Notman
pioneered the creation of outdoor scenes in the studio.
His work was well known in Canada and the United States,
thanks in large part to publications in the
widely-circulated magazine The Philadelphia
Photographer. A number of techniques invented by
William Notman can be seen in this composition:
The
effect of deep snow was created by the judicious
placing of sheep's fleece in the foreground set
slightly out of focus. Hard packed snow in camp or
snow on clothes or branches was actually a sprinkling
of coarse grained salt... Falling snow was
created by spraying white paint into the air and
passing the glass plate negative through the cloud as
it fell. In his advertisements, William Notman claimed
these techniques as his own invention and had them
patented.
--Stanley
G. Triggs, William
Notman: The Stamp of A
Studio
(Art Gallery of Ontario and The Coach House
Press, 1985)
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