Business

When was photography invented? Take a look at the world’s first ever photo!

By Chris George,David Clark

Copyright digitalcameraworld

When was photography invented? Take a look at the world's first ever photo!

Skip to main content

Close main menu

Digital Camera World
THE HOME OF DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHY

View Profile

Search Digital Camera World

Accessories

Buying Guides

The Photography & Video Show

Digital Camera

Australian Camera

Australian ProPhoto

Photography Magazines

Why subscribe?

Issues filled with product reviews, latest updates, expert advice and more
Delivered to your Android or IOS device
Every issue is packed with photo tips, kit reviews and inspiration

From$12Subscribe now

Camera news
Camera rumors
Photography & Video Show
Cheatsheets
Photo mag deals
Prime Day deals

Don’t miss these

Film Cameras
This 1958 camera was way ahead of its time (and here’s why you’ve never heard of it)

Compact Cameras
Is this the most beautiful camera money can buy?

Photography
World Photography Day: what is it, and why is it today?

Artificial Intelligence
AI attempted to restore the world’s oldest photograph, failed epically, and now I can’t stop laughing at the results

Photo Technique
Bring back the fun in photography – with a World Photography Day gift to yourself!

Mirrorless Cameras
The world’s first mirrorless camera launched 17 years ago today! Here it is… but is it still any good?

Galleries and Exhibitions
The world’s greatest-ever photo exhibition is 70 years old (and you can still go and see it today!)

Street Photography
Street photography: Has naming the genre done more harm than good?

DSLR Cameras
Did you know that Kodak collaborated with Canon and Nikon to turn their film cameras into DSLRs?

Photo Technique
This Phase One camera sees through time and reveals lost histories

There is such a thing as timeless camera design

Street Photography
This pro exclusively shoots with Fujifilm to create this timeless black-and-white street photography

Photo Technique
I’m not sure we should share our photography secrets, and I’ll explain why

The 25 best photographer autobiographies ever written

This is how a photo geek astronaut started NASA’s relationship with Hasselblad

Photography

When was photography invented? Take a look at the world’s first ever photo!

David Clark

Contributions from
Chris George

19 September 2025

Have you ever wondered when photography was invented? This man is widely credited for doing it nearly 200 years ago

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

When was photography invented? This is the world’s first photograph, by Joseph Niepce in 1826. It was taken from a window of his Le Gras estate at Saint-Loup-de-Varennes, France, produced by exposing a bitumen-coated pewter plate in a camera obscura. It took an exposure time of eight hours!
(Image credit: Hulton Archive / Getty Images)

You might also like…

Ever wondered when was photography invented? Joseph Nicéphore Niépce, a Frenchman, is the person who takes the credit for taking the world’s first permanent photograph in around 1826.

Interestingly, though, he did not invent the camera itself. It was another Frenchman who invented the camera, Louis Daguerre.
Following years of trial and experimentation, Niépce was finally successful in making permanent images from nature. He called his process “héliographie”, which translates as “drawing with the sun”.

You may like

World Photography Day: what is it, and why is it today?

AI attempted to restore the world’s oldest photograph, failed epically, and now I can’t stop laughing at the results

Bring back the fun in photography – with a World Photography Day gift to yourself!

The earliest surviving image (which you can see above) shows a courtyard at Niépce’s home in Saint-Loup-de-Varennes, France. It was recorded onto a sheet of pewter plate, which was coated with bitumen of Judea – a naturally occurring light-sensitive asphalt.

When was photography invented? Another of Niepce’s early photographs, showing a still life taken, in around 1827 (Image credit: Hulton Deutsch / Getty Images)
It took an eight-hour exposure in bright sunshine to produce a positive image, which was complete once the unexposed areas were dissolved in oil of lavender and white petroleum.
Niépce’s 1826 heliograph was dark and blurred, and the plate had to be viewed from a certain angle in order for the details of the building to be visible. Nevertheless, it was a monumental breakthrough.
Niépce had previously made a copy of a 17th-century engraving using the same process. He also made another ‘heliograph’ in 1824 and described it in a letter to his brother: “I have succeeded in obtaining a picture as good as I could wish,” he wrote.

Get the Digital Camera World Newsletter
The best camera deals, reviews, product advice, and unmissable photography news, direct to your inbox!
Contact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

When was photography invented? A portrait of Joseph Nicéphore Niépce (Image credit: Getty Images)
“The objects appear with astonishing sharpness and exactitude down to the smallest details and finest gradations. As the image is almost colorless, one can judge it only by holding it at an angle, and I can tell you the effect is downright magical.” This heliograph has not survived.
Niépce’s pioneering work was not recognized in his lifetime and he died in obscurity in 1833. It wasn’t until 1952 that the photo-historian, Helmut Gernsheim, discovered the image, stored in a London warehouse, and confirmed it as the world’s first photograph.
However, before his death, Niépce shared his process with his business partner – Daguerre, who went on to develop his own groundbreaking “Daguerreotype” process – and would be credited as the inventor of the camera.

You may like

World Photography Day: what is it, and why is it today?

AI attempted to restore the world’s oldest photograph, failed epically, and now I can’t stop laughing at the results

Bring back the fun in photography – with a World Photography Day gift to yourself!

When was photography invented? The room through which the first ever surviving photograph was taken, in Niepce’s house in France, which opened as a museum in 2002 (Image credit: Getty Images)
The precursor to the camera
Niépce’s new process used a camera obscura to create the image. This optical device could take the form of a light-tight box or a darkened room, with a small hole in one side that lets in light from outside. As light travels in straight lines, the resulting image of the exterior scene is projected, upside-down, onto the surface directly opposite.
The camera obscura had been in use for a long time. The term, first used in 1604 by the German mathematician and astronomer Johannes Kepler, comes from the Latin for “chamber” (“camera”) and “dark” (“obscura”).
The first known use of a camera obscura was in around 400BC, by the Chinese philosopher Mozi. It was later by the Greek philosopher Aristotle. In the 13th century, Roger Bacon described using one to observe a solar eclipse.
Rudimentary lenses were added to the aperture from the 16th century onwards, to give a sharper and more detailed image. By the early 18th century, wooden camera obscura devices were being made that had a distinctly camera-like design.
Images made by a camera obscura were regarded as a visual wonder, a scientifically interesting phenomenon, and a useful drawing aid. However, beyond tracing their outlines by hand, it was impossible to make these images in any way permanent until Niépce’s invention.
Thomas Wedgwood
Thomas Wedgwood (1771-1805) made the earliest documented experiments in recording images on paper and leather coated with light-sensitive silver nitrate – and therefore also has a claim to being the first photographer.
In a letter from the 1790s, inventor and mechanical engineer James Watt wrote that Wedgwood’s primary objective in these “silver pictures” had been “to capture real-world scenes with a camera obscura,” but those attempts failed.
The son of the famous potter Josiah Wedgwood, Thomas Wedgwood did succeed in capturing what Watt described as “silhouette images of objects in contact with the treated surface”, later called photograms. However, as Wedgwood lacked a means to make them permanent, the unexposed areas gradually darkened in daylight.
You might also like…
You might be interested to know that The history of photography dates back to 400BC! You can also take a look at 30 cameras that changed the world of photography.

David Clark

Social Links Navigation

David Clark is a photography journalist and author, and was features writer on Amateur Photographer for nine years. He has met and interviewed many of the world’s most iconic photographers and is the author of Photography in 100 Words: Exploring the Art of Photography with Fifty of its Greatest Masters.
With contributions from

Chris GeorgeContent Director

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.

World Photography Day: what is it, and why is it today?

AI attempted to restore the world’s oldest photograph, failed epically, and now I can’t stop laughing at the results

Bring back the fun in photography – with a World Photography Day gift to yourself!

The world’s first mirrorless camera launched 17 years ago today! Here it is… but is it still any good?

The world’s greatest-ever photo exhibition is 70 years old (and you can still go and see it today!)

Street photography: Has naming the genre done more harm than good?

Latest in Photography

It looks like sci-fi, but it’s real – and the photographer just gained global recognition for it. But what exactly are we looking at?

Sony World Photography Awards 2026 announces judges and London exhibition dates

This stunning photo of Belgrade was captured with a compact camera setup – the Fujifilm X-T30 and 23mm lens

Stop being afraid to crop – it’s not cheating!

This pro exclusively shoots with Fujifilm to create this timeless black-and-white street photography

This photographer takes scroll-stopping images with creativity, planning… and sometimes, duct tape

Latest in Features

When was photography invented? Take a look at the world’s first ever photo!

Open gate on your iPhone? Apple just hijacked mirrorless cameras’ killer feature

The iPhone 17 Pro’s “3 = 8” lens math doesn’t add up. But the trick to the longest-ever iPhone zoom isn’t about the lens – it’s about the sensor

If the Nikon ZR is a rehoused Z6 III, do we really need it?

iPhone Air? It’s just half of a folding phone – I’ll wait for the other half, thanks!

Is Canon’s new 32MP / 7K sensor coming to the R6 Mark III? I think so

LATEST ARTICLES

The iPhone 17 Pro’s “3 = 8” lens math doesn’t add up. But the trick to the longest-ever iPhone zoom isn’t about the lens – it’s about the sensor

LaCie launches new, super-fast and super-strong portable SSD

This pro exclusively shoots with Fujifilm to create this timeless black-and-white street photography

The Fujifilm Instax Pal is a tiny compact camera with digicam vibes – and for $44, Walmart is practically giving it away

It looks like sci-fi, but it’s real – and the photographer just gained global recognition for it. But what exactly are we looking at?

Digital Camera World is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

Terms and conditions

Contact Future’s experts

Privacy policy

Cookies policy

Advertise with us

Accessibility Statement

Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street,

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait…