The Launceston Glass Plate Collection, Tasmania Australia, Box 9

The Launceston Glass Plate Collection

Launceston, Tasmania • c.1910


Discovered in Launceston, Tasmania, these remarkable glass plate negatives remained unseen for more than a century. Carefully preserved within a series of archival boxes, the collection offers a rare glimpse into everyday Tasmanian life during the early twentieth century.

As each glass plate is professionally scanned and restored, new clues continue to emerge. Handwritten notes, locations, family connections and subtle details hidden within the photographs are gradually helping to uncover the identities and stories of the people captured within the collection.

This gallery represents Box 9 of approximately twenty boxes discovered within the archive. While much about the collection remains unknown, evidence found amongst the negatives suggests a possible connection to Louis Konrad, a photographer whose studio once operated from 60 Cameron Street, Launceston, Tasmania.

Dating to around 1910, these portraits preserve fleeting moments from a world long since changed. Men, women and children gaze back through time, their expressions and personalities carefully recorded on fragile sheets of glass.

More than one hundred years later, these faces continue to tell their stories. Through careful preservation, restoration and ongoing research, a forgotten collection is gradually being brought back to light.

Every glass plate holds a story. Each scan brings us one step closer to uncovering it.