Walter Bentley Woodbury (after Henry Peach Robinson), A Mountain-Dew Girl: Killarney, 1866.
This is one of the first woodburytypes ever published. Photographer Walter B. Woodbury, who invented the process—or someone working under his supervision—likely made it. Woodburytypes were the most successful reproductions of photographs in the second half of the 19th century and were prized for their subtle tonality. The complexity of the process, and especially the fragility of the surface gelatin, made it a relatively short-lived reproductive technique.