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Title Page — Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions — Anna Atkins

Anna Atkins · 1843

Title Page — Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions

Year
1843
Original process
Cyanotype contact print on paper
Held at
New York Public Library (Spencer Collection)

Maison Picturale reinterpretation in cyanotype

About this work

Hand-lettered title page of the first photographically illustrated book ever published. Atkins traced her own calligraphy with a brush in potassium ferrocyanide, then contact-printed it through the cyanotype process — a single, luminous Prussian blue page that marks the birth of book photography.

Reference file : Wikimedia Commons (NYPL Spencer Collection)

Procédé Transposition

Each Maison Picturale print is a material reinterpretation of the image. Three readings of the same work — the original, its closest transposition, and a creative transposition into another procédé.

Deep Prussian blue on 640 gsm cotton paper. Process invented in 1842 by Sir John Herschel.

MP procédé — reformulated non-toxic chemistry, signed by Tristan Sidem.

View the procédé

History of the process

Cyanotype is one of the oldest photographic processes still practised today. It was invented in 1842 by Sir John Herschel, a British astronomer and chemist, while searching for a way to reproduce his scientific notes. The process relies on the photosensitivity of iron salts which, when exposed to ultraviolet light, produce an intense pigment — Prussian blue.

It was Anna Atkins, a botanist and friend of Herschel, who elevated the cyanotype to an art form. Between 1843 and 1853, she produced "Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions", widely considered the first book illustrated with photographs. Her botanical plates — seaweed placed directly on sensitised paper — are now held in the world's greatest institutions: the New York Public Library, the Victoria & Albert Museum, and the Getty Museum.

Our approach

Every cyanotype print made by Maison Picturale is a unique piece, produced entirely by hand in our Parisian workshop.

The paper used is a 100% cotton satin watercolour stock at 640 g/m², chosen for its ability to absorb the emulsion deep into its fibres — the Prussian blue does not sit on the surface but dyes the very fibre of the paper. This ensures exceptional longevity and a tactile quality reminiscent of engraving.

Inside our studio

1 Passage Dagorno, Paris 20e. Each print is hand-crafted by Tristan Sidem and Raphaël Lebas de Lacour, using Vision Picturale's reformulated non-toxic chemistry. Limited edition, signed and numbered.

The procédé at work — each layer laid by hand
The procédé at work — each layer laid by hand
Tristan Sidem, master printer
Tristan Sidem, master printer
The 1 Passage Dagorno studio, Paris 20e
The 1 Passage Dagorno studio, Paris 20e

Commission this print

  • Hand-printed and signed by Tristan Sidem & Raphaël Lebas de Lacour
  • Reformulated non-toxic chemistry (Vision Picturale recipes)
  • Limited edition, numbered, certificate of authenticity
  • 1 Passage Dagorno studio, Paris 20e
  • Delivery 3 to 5 weeks · ships worldwide from France

Available formats

  • 30 × 40 cmFrom 280€
  • 40 × 50 cmFrom 420€
  • 50 × 70 cmFrom 680€
  • 70 × 100 cmFrom 1180€
  • Custom sizeFrom 1850€

Indicative pricing — the exact rate depends on the chosen procédé, support and finish.

Contemporary print after a work in the public domain (CPI L.123-1, 70 years post-mortem). Hand-crafted reinterpretation by Maison Picturale's master printers — this is not an original vintage by the master. The mention 'after [Master]' is systematic on the print and on the certificate of authenticity.