Answer:
This is the timeline
Explanation:
1826 Nicéphore Niépce (1765-1833) a French doctor, produces the world’s first photograph using pewter plates in a camera obscura. Exposure was around eight hours.
1829 Jacques Louis Mande Daguerre and Nicephore Niepce sign partnership agreement to work on perfecting photography
1833 On a visit to Lake Como, William Henry Fox Talbot, an English amateur scientist, is frustrated by his inability to draw, even when using a camera lucida.
1855 Alphonse Poitevin, patented the carbon print offering a permanent image without grain. Negatives were printed onto a “tissue” containing carbon and other pigments in a gelatin base. The gelatin had been made light-sensitive by a bath of potassium bichromate. After washing, the image on the tissue was transferred to a paper base and the backing of the tissue was stripped off Etienne Carjat Charles Baudelaire 1860
1855 Poitevin also patents photolithography using dichromated albumen exposed to light on a lithographic stone Pierre Tremaux Deuxieme Regard du Syphon du Gd. Aqueduc 1850
1855 Roger Fenton makes photographs of the Crimean War using a specially constructed caravan with a portable darkroom. Roger Fenton Balaklava Looking Seawards 1855
1856 John Benjamin Dancer applies for a patent for a stereoscopic camera allowing both images to be taken at the same time 1900
1856 At the request of Queen Victoria, Joseph Cundall and Robert Howlett create a series of photographs at Aldershot Camp of Crimean war heroes after their return to England Joseph Cundall and Robert Howlett Heroes of the Crimean War 1856
1856 Francis Frith makes his first trip to Egypt to photograph antiquities Francis Frith The Statues of Memon, Plain of Thebes 1857
1856 Lewis Carroll (the Rev. Charles Dodgson) begins photographing. Though mostly known for his images of young girls, scholars later determine that this represents less than 50%
of his output. He gave up photography entirely in 1880
1856 Introduced by Adolphe Alexandre Martin, the tintype, also known as a ferrotype, is a variation of the ambrotype, but produced on metallic sheet (not, actually, tin) instead of glass. unknown unknown 1880
1856 Charles Negre receives a patent for
improvements on the heliogravure process Charles Negre Cathedrale de Chartres, Moulages Pourtout du Choeur, 16th siecle 1857
1857 O.G. Rejlander produces Two Ways Of Life, an allegorical composite photograph combining 30 negatives
1858 Nadar takes the first aerial photograph from a balloon over Paris.
1858 The first book book illustrated with original stereographs is published in London. The book by the astronomer Charles Piazzi Smyth is Teneriffe, an Astronomer´s experiment: or, specialities of a residence above the clouds.
1858 Alphonse Poitevin, patented the carbon print offering a permanent image without grain. Negatives were printed onto a “tissue” containing carbon and other pigments in a gelatin base. The gelatin had been made light-sensitive by a bath of potassium bichromate. After washing, the image on the tissue was transferred to a paper base and the backing of the tissue was stripped off Louis De Clerq Denderah (Facade du midi) 1858
1858 Henry Peach Robinson makes Fading Away, a story telling genre print combining five negatives. He becomes very influential in establishing rules for photographic “art”
1859 A group of artists and photographers, including Eugène Delacroix, Francis Wey and Gustave Le Gray succeed in getting photography included in the 1859 Paris Salon but the photography section has a separate entrance.
1859 The Sunbeam: Photographs from Nature is published Philip Henry Delamotte Magdalen College, Oxford, from the Cherwell 1859
1859 Nadar makes photographs underground in Paris using battery-powered arc lamps.
1893 The flash-bulb is invented, a glass bulb filled with magnesium-coated metal ribbon, ignited electrically
1895 X-rays are discovered by Wilhelm Rontgen James Green, James H. Gardiner British Batrachians and Reptiles, Moldge Palmatia 1890
1897 Alfred Stieglitz becomes editor of Camera Notes, the publication of the Camera Club of New York Alfred Stieglitz An Icy Night 1898
1898 Frank A. Rinehart photographs indian leaders attending the Trans-Mississippi Exposition, and Indian Congress, Omaha, Nebraska, 1898 F. A. Rinehart Gov. Diego Narango-Santa Clara 1899
1899 ‘The New School of American Photography’ the first major exhibition of American pictorial photography is held at the Royal Photographic Society. It consists of 360 images by such photographers as: F. Holland Day; Edward Steichen; Gertrude Kasebier; and Clarence White.