when were photographs invented
Photographs, in the sense of permanent images made in a camera, were first created in the 1820s, with the earliest surviving photo dating to around 1826–1827.
Early invention timeline
- In the early 1820s, French inventor Nicéphore Niépce developed a process called heliography to fix images produced in a camera obscura onto a photosensitive surface.
- Around 1826–1827, Niépce produced View from the Window at Le Gras , generally considered the earliest surviving camera photograph from nature.
So what counts as “invented”?
- Many historians treat the early 1820s, when Niépce first obtained durable light‑fast camera images, as the point when photography was truly “invented.”
- Some sources highlight 1826–1827 instead, since that is when the first surviving photograph was made, while later developments in the 1830s refined and popularized practical photographic methods.
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