The price of professional photography is determined by your listing’s size and location. After signing up, you will receive a quote via email within 24 hours. You will be free to decided to move forward or not.
- Professional Photography Now Available Free
- Professional Photography Now Available Channels
- Professional Photography Now Available Times
- Dec 03, 2020 History of photography, the treatment of the historical and aesthetic aspects of still photography. Photography is the method of recording an image of an object through the action of light, or related radiation, on a light-sensitive material. The word was first used in the 1830s.
- Standard Photography Family Newborn Individual Senior Photos Lifestyle Shoots Engagement Wedding Commercial Services Professional Headshots Residential Real Estate Commercial Real Estate Product Photography Other services available upon request.
Whether you’re just starting out or you’ve owned your photography business for years, PPA can help. Join a community that understands your goals and challenges and meet colleagues who want to see you succeed. We have a passion forhelping photographers grow their practices, exceed customer expectations and push the artistic envelope. We are a source for inspiration, protection, community and education.
Join a community that understands your goals and challenges and meet colleagues who want to see you succeed.
Benefits
Tools & Resources that Help Photographers Run Profitable Fulfilling Businesses
See Our BenefitsEvents
Looking to Connect with Like-Minded Professionals? You're In the Right Place
See EventsEducation
Content Curated Specifically for Photographers and Photo-Entrepreneurs
See EducationJOIN PPA NOWInterested in becoming a member? Get started by simply filling out the below information.
© Erich CaparasBENEFITSCheck Out Our BenefitsProtection for PPA members
We are here to protect you at all times, on all fronts. PPA membership has been carefully crafted to help photographers make more and spend less. Have peace of mind knowing your gear is protected with our equipment insurance policy, included with everymembership, and eliminate the hassle of getting quotes by purchasing everything a la carte. In the long run, it actually costs you to not be with PPA!INSURANCE OFFERINGSEquipment
Insurance
Get the DetailsMember
Advocacy
Get the DetailsGeneral
Liability
Get the DetailsData Loss &
Negligence
Get the DetailsBe part of something bigger than yourself. PPA is dedicated to providing a powerful sense of community and unwavering level of support for our members. From online networking forums and monthly webinars to our face-to-face workshopsand annual conference, you’ll never feel like you’re going it alone.Community BenefitsJOIN NOW!© Michael Anthony© Phaneendra Gudapati© Dennis Kelley© Andy Lay© Coleen Graybill© Cris Duncan© Michael Anthony© Phaneendra Gudapati© Dennis Kelley© Andy Lay© Cris Duncan© Coleen GraybillHaving a strong community and support system is just as important to photographers who wantto develop a strong business and grow as artists, as education opportunities, equipment insurance, or copyrightprotection. That's why PPA is dedicated to providing exactly that for its members..Whether it's online networking forums or engaging photographers all over the world through multiplesocial media platforms, face-to-face workshops, an annual conference, or monthly webinars, the PPA community will make surethat you never feel like you're out there all alone!Community BenefitsJOIN NOW!© Jonathan GivensFind the answers you need.
Sometimes all you need is a bit of trusted advice to get you moving. PPA’s educational resources can help you realize your strengths and see new opportunities.UpcomingWebinarsProfessional Photography Now Available Free
Thursday, Jan 28, 20219 Tips to Creating an Amazing Client Experience…
Seeing Through the Eyes of a Competition Judge…
PPA Code of Ethics
By submitting this application today you agree to comply with PPA’s Code of Ethics as well as PPA's Terms and Conditions as listed below:
Professional Photographers of America (PPA) Code of Ethics
As a requirement for admission to and retention of membership and participation in this photographic association, each PPA member and participant shall agree to use the highest levels of professionalism, honesty and integrity in all relationships with colleagues, clients and the general public.
Terms & Conditions
$17.50 of domestic dues ($42.00 non-domestic) is applied to Professional Photographer magazine and is not deductible from dues. U.S. and Canadian members receive both the print and digital versions of the magazine each month. International members receive the electronic edition of Professional Photographer magazine unless they request a printed version. Payments or contributions to Professional Photographers of America, Inc., are not deductible as charitable contributions for Income Tax purposes. Payments may be deductible as an ordinary and necessary business expense if you are in a photography related business. Please consult your own tax advisor. Submission of this application indicates your agreement to follow and abide by the policies and procedures and the Code of Ethics of the Professional Photographers of America. Membership commences upon receipt of payment and is for one year. Dues subject to change. Dues include $10 per non-international member as the Copyright Protection Fund assessment.
Information for Monthly Credit Card Option Applicants:
By submitting a monthly credit card option application, I understand that PPA will charge my credit card monthly. I understand that I will pay an additional $1.00 per month for bank processing fees included in the dues amounts in this application. The monthly charge will appear on my credit card statements as Professional Photographers of America and the statement will act as a receipt. PPA will notify me of any dues or membership changes and will automatically renew my membership. I can at any time resign from PPA and stop charges being made to my credit card. Any payments made prior to that are nonrefundable. A resignation must be received in writing, fax or email. Emailed resignation must come from the email address contained in the member's record, include their name and PPA ID number. I agree to inform PPA of any changes made to my credit card, such as a change in my account number. If PPA is unable to successfully make a charge to my credit card, PPA will contact me to make any changes or corrections to my record. If PPA is unable to successfully process my monthly payment, my membership will be considered void, and I am required to pay the balance in full to reinstate my membership. PPA is not responsible for any overdraft or bank fees charged to the member if a debit card is used for membership dues payments.
- Inventing the medium
- Early experiments
- Photography’s early evolution, c. 1840–c. 1900
- The revolution of technique
- Establishing genres
- Documentary photography
- Photography as art
- Perfecting the medium, c. 1900–c. 1945
- Photography c. 1945 to the 21st century
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
JoinProfessional Photography Now Available Channels
Britannica's Publishing Partner Program and our community of experts to gain a global audience for your work!History of photography, method of recording the image of an object through the action of light, or related radiation, on a light-sensitive material. The word, derived from the Greek photos (“light”) and graphein (“to draw”), was first used in the 1830s.
This article treats the historical and aesthetic aspects of still photography. For a discussion of the technical aspects of the medium, seephotography, technology of. For a treatment of motion-picture photography, or cinematography, seemotion picture, history of, and motion-picture technology.
General considerations
As a means of visual communication and expression, photography has distinct aesthetic capabilities. In order to understand them, one must first understand the characteristics of the process itself. One of the most important characteristics is immediacy. Usually, but not necessarily, the image that is recorded is formed by a lens in a camera. Upon exposure to the light forming the image, the sensitive material undergoes changes in its structure, a latent (but reversed) image usually called a negative is formed, and the image becomes visible by development and permanent by fixing with sodium thiosulfate, called “hypo.” With modern materials, the processing may take place immediately or may be delayed for weeks or months.
The essential elements of the image are usually established immediately at the time of exposure. This characteristic is unique to photography and sets it apart from other ways of picture making. The seemingly automatic recording of an image by photography has given the process a sense of authenticity shared by no other picture-making technique. The photograph possesses, in the popular mind, such apparent accuracy that the adage “the camera does not lie” has become an accepted, if erroneous, cliché.
This understanding of photography’s supposed objectivity has dominated evaluations of its role in the arts. In the early part of its history, photography was sometimes belittled as a mechanical art because of its dependence on technology. In truth, however, photography is not the automatic process that is implied by the use of a camera. Although the camera usually limits the photographer to depicting existing objects rather than imaginary or interpretive views, the skilled photographer can introduce creativity into the mechanical reproduction process. The image can be modified by different lenses and filters. The type of sensitive material used to record the image is a further control, and the contrast between highlight and shadow can be changed by variations in development. In printing the negative, the photographer has a wide choice in the physical surface of the paper, the tonal contrast, and the image colour. The photographer also may set up a completely artificial scene to photograph.
The most important control is, of course, the creative photographer’s vision. He or she chooses the vantage point and the exact moment of exposure. The photographer perceives the essential qualities of the subject and interprets it according to his or her judgment, taste, and involvement. An effective photograph can disseminate information about humanity and nature, record the visible world, and extend human knowledge and understanding. For all these reasons, photography has aptly been called the most important invention since the printing press.
Inventing the medium
Antecedents
The forerunner of the camera was the camera obscura, a dark chamber or room with a hole (later a lens) in one wall, through which images of objects outside the room were projected on the opposite wall. The principle was probably known to the Chinese and to ancient Greeks such as Aristotle more than 2,000 years ago. Late in the 16th century, the Italian scientist and writer Giambattista della Porta demonstrated and described in detail the use of a camera obscura with a lens. While artists in subsequent centuries commonly used variations on the camera obscura to create images they could trace, the results from these devices depended on the artist’s drawing skills, and so scientists continued to search for a method to reproduce images completely mechanically.
In 1727 the German professor of anatomy Johann Heinrich Schulze proved that the darkening of silver salts, a phenomenon known since the 16th century and possibly earlier, was caused by light and not heat. He demonstrated the fact by using sunlight to record words on the salts, but he made no attempt to preserve the images permanently. His discovery, in combination with the camera obscura, provided the basic technology necessary for photography. It was not until the early 19th century, however, that photography actually came into being.
Early experiments
Heliography
Nicéphore Niépce, an amateur inventor living near Chalon-sur-Saône, a city 189 miles (304 km) southeast of Paris, was interested in lithography, a process in which drawings are copied or drawn by hand onto lithographic stone and then printed in ink. Not artistically trained, Niépce devised a method by which light could draw the pictures he needed. He oiled an engraving to make it transparent and then placed it on a plate coated with a light-sensitive solution of bitumen of Judea (a type of asphalt) and lavender oil and exposed the setup to sunlight. After a few hours, the solution under the light areas of the engraving hardened, while that under the dark areas remained soft and could be washed away, leaving a permanent, accurate copy of the engraving. Calling the process heliography (“sun drawing”), Niépce succeeded from 1822 onward in copying oiled engravings onto lithographic stone, glass, and zinc and from 1826 onto pewter plates.
In 1826/27, using a camera obscura fitted with a pewter plate, Niépce produced the first successful photograph from nature, a view of the courtyard of his country estate, Gras, from an upper window of the house. The exposure time was about eight hours, during which the sun moved from east to west so that it appears to shine on both sides of the building.
Niépce produced his most successful copy of an engraving, a portrait of Cardinal d’Amboise, in 1826. It was exposed in about three hours, and in February 1827 he had the pewter plate etched to form a printing plate and had two prints pulled. Paper prints were the final aim of Niépce’s heliographic process, yet all his other attempts, whether made by using a camera or by means of engravings, were underexposed and too weak to be etched. Nevertheless, Niépce’s discoveries showed the path that others were to follow with more success.
Professional Photography Now Available Times
- key people
- related topics