Many of these paper prints survived longer and in better condition than the actual films of that era.
He was the first to use paper prints and to make full-length portrait enlargements.
From its inception, photographic production at Bellevue was ambitious and over 1200 positive paper prints were made in 1869.
There is no record of the film format used to recapture the paper prints.
The paper prints approximately 6,703 copies per week.
Negative films and paper prints are by far the most common form of color film photography today.
A paper print survived of the film in the Library of Congress.
This is different from traditional digital images, which represent colors that should appear on a monitor or a paper print.
Digital photographs are stored in a computer but paper prints can also be made from digital pictures.
Unmounted paper prints and the scrapbook albums started replacing them.