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Sarony, Major & Knapp Lith.
In late 1871, Sarony moved his studio to 37 Union Square where it occupied several floors above the ground level. Rental on the Union Square building was $8,000 a year (an equivalent of over $116,000 in year 2006). Customers rode a small slow-moving hydraulic elevator up from the street level to Sarony’s reception room located on the fifth floor. Richard Grant White, writing for the Galaxy magazine described Sarony’s studio as “Glare, bareness, screens, iron instruments of torture, and a smell as of a drug and chemical warehouse on fire in the distance. A photographer’s operating room is always something between a barn, a green-room, and a laboratory” (from “A Morning at Sarony’s” in Galaxy, March 1870, p. 409.) The “iron instruments of torture” were posing braces and stands to help the subject remain motionless for exposure times which often ranged from fifteen seconds up to a minute. Sarony’s involvement in the portrait making was primarily in arranging the camera, extracting the right expressions from the face and body of his subject, lighting, drapes, and props — the art of the photo. Numerous assistants were on his staff to attend to the mechanical chores of the camera operation and the chemical processes involved. Sarony considered himself an artist above all else — preferring to draw with charcoal and crayon. However, with his innovative techniques in application of lighting, posing his subjects, and arranging background elements in portraits he rose to prominence.""--https://www.peachridgeglass.com/2012/09/the-great-work-of-sarony-major-knapp-lithographer-new-york/"