The Wet Plate process is a photographic process, widely used to produce negatives but also employed in a modified form to produce positives (ambrotypes and tintypes).

History:
Invented by Frederick Scott Archer of England in 1851

Process:
A piece of clear glass is coated with a very thin layer of iodized collodion (made from gun-cotton (nitrocellulose) dissolved in ether and alcohol, mixed with potassium iodide). The coated plate is dipped in a silver solution in the darkroom which makes it light-sensitive. After this, the plate must be immediately exposed in a camera. The exposure needs to be completed before the chemicals on the plate have time to dry out--hence "Wet Plate"

After development and fixing, the negative can be printed on any material. Most wet plate negatives, however, were used to make prints on albumen paper.

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