This website presents our knowledge and research on this important aspect of the Royal Collection. As of April 2026 it will not be regularly updated and new research on this topic will sit within the main website.

Glass plate negatives

Albert and Victoria’s collection of glass plate negatives show photographers’ working methods

Photographs of Objects and Works of Art

      From the mid-1850s onwards, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert used photography to document their growing collections. To achieve this, the royal couple regularly commissioned photographers such as Dr Ernst Becker, Robert Howlett (1831-58) and William Bambridge (1810-79). Some of the resulting glass plate negatives serve as valuable records for the history of the Royal Collection, as they depict original works that are no longer in the collection, including a number of early daguerreotypes.

      Additionally, a small number of negatives in this section shows pieces that were never part of the Royal Collection, and yet important to the royal couple. Highlights include works attributed to Raphael in the nineteenth century, which were key for the completion of Prince Albert’s Raphael Collection.

      Daguerreotypes and ambrotypes

      Albert and Victoria commissioned photographs of daguerreotypes and ambrotypes

      Works of art

      Albert and Victoria employed photographers to document artworks important to them