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#Vermont #Farmer #Capture #Photos #Snowflakes

Living in the snowbelt of Jericho, Vermont, in the 1800s meant dealing with around 120 inches of snow each year. While many dreaded those winters, at least one person found the beauty in what they offered: Wilson Bentley, who was so intrigued by the mystery of snowflakes that he became the first person to successfully photograph one. 

It is largely due to Bentley’s pioneering photomicrographs of snow crystals that the world became aware that no two are alike.

Born in Jericho in 1865, Bentley lived and worked on his family’s farm and was taught by his mother. From the time he was a small boy, he was fascinated by the natural world around him and loved to study butterflies, leaves and spider webs. He kept a daily record of the weather conditions and was fascinated by raindrops. He first became interested in snow crystals after he received a microscope for his fifteenth birthday. 

One of a set of 10 Bentley photomicrographs of snowflakes, circa late 1890s-1920s, that sold at Sotheby’s for $10,000.

“Always, right from the beginning, it was the snowflakes that fascinated me most,” Bentley said. “The farm folks up in this country dread the winter, but I was supremely happy.”

He tried to draw the snowflakes he saw through that microscope, but they were too complex to record before they melted, so the self-taught photographer came up with a solution and invented a new method in the process: photomicrography, the photographing of very small objects, especially of snowflakes. He connected his bellows camera to the microscope in order to create photos that showed intricate details of each snow crystal. The apparatus was set up outside so that the delicate specimens would not melt, and he stood in the cold for hours at a time, waiting patiently until he caught falling flakes on a blackboard and rapidly and carefully transferred each one to a microscope slide. He captured his first image of a snowflake in January 1885.

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