Calotype

/ˈkæl.ə.taɪp/ noun

An early photographic process from the 1840s that used paper coated with silver compounds to create negative images, allowing multiple prints to be made from one picture.

From Greek 'kalos' (beautiful) + 'typos' (impression or type). Coined by William Henry Fox Talbot, who invented the process in 1841. The term literally means 'beautiful impression.'

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