Skip to content

Antique Photography Lives on at This Pioneer Square Studio

Locals can get a tintype portrait taken at Henrietta's Eye

By Kendall Upton January 3, 2020

opener_2

This article originally appeared in the December 2019 issue of Seattle magazine.

This article appears in print in the December 2019 issue. Click here to subscribe.

Despite tintype photography’s Civil War–era origins, you can hold a magnifying glass to such a photo and see individual threads of clothing. That’s because the image is made of molecular silver crystals, much smaller than pixels, and therefore doesn’t undergo the same blurry degradation that occurs when film or a digital image is zoomed in on or enlarged. It’s Libby Bulloff and Stephen Robinson’s favorite way to take photos in their Pioneer Square studio, Henrietta’s Eye, where the local artists offer portrait sessions to the public and produce their own fine art images.

The quality of the photographs depends on the uncertain effect of each element of the hands-on process—chemicals, light levels, the dark room, and requisite patience—but that’s why Robinson and Bulloff fell in love with the form. That, and the excitement of watching photographs bloom as they pour developing solution over the metal plates, which are used in the old-timey, accordion-like camera instead of film. About a week after having your tintype photo taken, you’ll receive a metal plate with the transferred image: a unique handmade heirloom that an iPhone photo just can’t beat. 

Follow Us

Seattle Gift Guide: Comfort, Style, and Everyday Essentials

Seattle Gift Guide: Comfort, Style, and Everyday Essentials

Open them today, enjoy for months—and years—to come.

A few gift ideas for the season, mixing local favorites with smart, useful finds. Easy pieces to wear, sweet things to share, and a couple of upgrades for the home. Nothing fussy, just solid picks that make life a little nicer.     Now the birds have a smart home too. The chic, camera-integrated Peep…

Publisher's Notebook: A Well Designed Life

Publisher’s Notebook: A Well Designed Life

Great design is never just about use.

Is life better when the things around us are beautiful? Beauty,  when we experience it, actually slows us down in the best possible way. It commands us to notice. A beautifully designed thing doesn’t just function—it holds within it the accrued talents of its maker, the culture of its time, and the promise that life…

Seattle Podcast: The Truth About College Admission with Adam Miller

Seattle Podcast: The Truth About College Admission with Adam Miller

An Insider's Guide on Getting into College
Sponsored

An Insider’s Guide on Getting into College

UPrep’s Director of College Counseling offers his take on the current admission landscape.

During his 20 years directing college counseling at UPrep, a 6–12 private school in Seattle’s Wedgwood neighborhood, Kelly Herrington has supported more than 1,500 students in their college search. UPrep graduates have matriculated to nearly 400 different colleges and universities in 44 states and 10 countries. Below Kelly shares three observations on the current college…