A photograph made by creating a positive directly on a thin sheet of black-enamelled metal coated with collodion. They were popular throughout the nineteenth century, especially among Civil War soldiers in America and later, immigrants and working class people due to their durability, ease of production and inexpensiveness. By the twentieth century, tintypes became among sidewalk portraitists.
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ChicagoImpart Encyclopedia of Art. "Tintype." Last updated February 17, 2026. https://imp-art.org/definitions/tintype/.
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MLA"Tintype." Impart Encyclopedia of Art, Feb. 17, 2026, https://imp-art.org/definitions/tintype/.
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HarvardImpart Encyclopedia of Art (2026) Tintype. Available at: https://imp-art.org/definitions/tintype/ (Accessed: 3 March 2026).
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