Album of 12 Albumen Photographic Views of Scotland - Dundee, ca. 1885–1895.
Oblong small folio (6.75 x 9 inches). Red pebbled cloth with gilt-stamped ‘Photographs’ on upper board; decorative corner devices; light hand-soiling, edge fading, and small scattered spots. The album contains twelve large albumen prints, each mounted to heavy card on original publisher’s hinged leaves. Photographs measure approx. 5.25 x 8 inches. Some gentle toning at margins, as typical for 19th-century albumen. Bindings firm and sound.
A handsome period album of Scottish topographical photography produced by the celebrated Dundee firm Valentine & Sons, one of the three major Scottish commercial studios of the 19th century. Among the views are:
+++ Holyrood from Calton Hill
+++ Edinburgh Castle and National Gallery
+++ Princes Street with Scott Monument
+++ Stirling Castle
+++ Ben Lomond
+++ Forth Bridge
+++ Trossachs Pier and Steamer
Images are captioned in the negative, characteristic of Valentine’s production for the middle- and upper-class tourist market. These albums were sold through stationers, railway bookstalls, and hotels, and represent an early commercial system of curated regional photography prior to the postcard era.
A well-preserved example of a classic Scottish photographic souvenir volume, notable for its strong tonal range and consistent print quality.
A 19th-century album of twelve Valentine & Sons albumen views of Scotland, including Edinburgh Castle, Holyrood, the Forth Bridge, and the Trossachs—classic compositions by one of Britain’s great commercial studios.
James Valentine—along with G. W. Wilson—was a foundational figure in Scottish commercial photography; his Dundee studio shaped public visual culture and later became one of the world’s major postcard producers.
His Dundee studio systematized the photographic depiction of Scottish landscape, architecture, and tourism, shaping how Scotland was visually imagined in the late 19th century. Valentine & Sons helped create the commercial model of curated regional imagery—albums, views, and series sold through railways, hotels, and stationers. The firm later became one of the world’s major postcard producers, meaning these albumen prints represent the pre-postcard phase of mass photographic culture.
These views are not isolated artworks but part of an early visual infrastructure of tourism and national identity.
Subjects: Albumen Prints; Valentine Studio; Scottish Topography; Tourism History; Architecture, Photography; Travel & Landscape; Scottish History; 19th-Century Visual Culture.
Item #21310
Price: $650.00









