Description: One of a kind, 1880s Japan Ambrotype Man with umbrella + Child, 1/2 Kiri Case. Caution; time damaged, very old with many years of survival, please examine the high resolution photos. (Thus the low price). Free shipping, (Will and want to ship to Japan as I consider this as an important, historical, Japanese ambrotype photograph outside of any museum), signature required. 2 Week 100% money back guaranteed if not matching description (minus shipping). When Japan opened its ports to the West in the 1850s, photography—called “shashin”, literally, “a copy of truth”, soon became widely available. High-end professional salons and open-air studios operated by itinerant practitioners offered portraits at every price range. While the popularity of ambrotypes, a positive photograph on glass, was short-lived in the United States, Japanese ambrotypes were in demand from the early 1870s until the end of the nineteenth century. Housed in poetry-inscribed kiri-wood boxes, they provide an intimate and rare glimpse of how modern Japanese society represented itself.James Ambrose Cutting patented the ambrotype process in 1854. Ambrotypes were most popular in the mid-1850s to mid-1860s. Cartes de visite and other paper print photographs, easily available in multiple copies, replaced them. An ambrotype is comprised of an underexposed glass negative placed against a dark background. The dark backing material creates a positive image. Photographers often applied pigments to the surface of the plate to add color, often tinting cheeks and lips red and adding gold highlights to jewelry, buttons, and belt buckles. Ambrotypes were sold in either cases or ornate frames to provide an attractive product and also to protect the negative with a cover glass and brass mat. The collodion positive, or ambrotype, first appeared in about 1853. By the 1860s the process had largely disappeared from high street studios, but it remained popular with itinerant open-air photographers until the 1880s, because portraits could be made in a few minutes while sitters waited.Kiri wood (case) is native to Japan and is akin to balsa wood (except stronger). Proper name is “Paulownia” and is known in Japan as kiri (桐), specifically referring to P. tomentosa; it is also known as the "Princess tree" or the ”Phoenix tree”. Paulownia is the mon of the office of the Japanese prime minister, and also serves as the Government Seal of Japan used by the Cabinet and the Government of Japan (whereas the chrysanthemum is the Imperial Seal of Japan).
Price: 190 USD
Location: Thousand Oaks, California
End Time: 2024-11-20T23:30:21.000Z
Shipping Cost: 0 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Size: 2 5/8" x 3 5/8"
Production Technique: Ambrotype
Framing: Kiri wood Half case
Country/Region of Manufacture: Japan
Style: Documentary, Figurative Art
Material: 1/2 Kiri wood case, Glass
Theme: Historical
Format: Ambrotype
Type: Photograph
Features: 1 Half Kiri wood case, One of a Kind (OOAK)
Antique: Yes
Number of Photographs: 1
Vintage: Yes
Image Orientation: Portrait
Subject: Man + Child
Autograph Format: Hard Signed
Signed: No
Original/Licensed Reprint: Original
Year of Production: 1880
Time Period Manufactured: 1880-1899
Unit of Sale: Single Piece