
Portrait of four children from December 1851
This photograph shows four children, probably siblings, carefully posed by the photographer on and around a couple wooden chairs — the younger boy kneeling on a kitchen chair, and the youngest girl seated in a high-chair. Despite the photographer’s best efforts, the expressions on the children are of suspicion and confusion. The older girl has one hand draped around the forearm of the younger boy, while the older boy holds one of the little girls hands — both quite awkwardly. The children neither understand nor approve of these arrangements, but Momma is probably off to one side, urging them to behave, so they try their best.
I don’t know who the photographer was, or exactly where this was taken, but I have noted that it was taken in December of 1851. It is a fine daguerreotype from just a dozen years after the introduction of photography to the public, so there was still a lot of experimenting going on to find pleasing poses. This photographer didn’t bother with any props beyond the chairs needed to raise the younger children to the heights of their standing siblings. This image provides a good view of children’s clothing from the early 1850s.
Hello,
I’m wondering if you could tell me if this photo was royalty free to use as album art.
Thank you,
-Luke
Comment by Luke Kuplowsky — October 22, 2010 @ 11:59 pm
Like all other photos from before 1890, this image is in the public domain — regardless of what some archives might claim. Ownership does not confer copyrights, those belong to the photographer.
Comment by ajmorris — November 5, 2010 @ 5:45 pm