Background
Nancy Ford Cones was born on September 11, 1869 in Milan, Ohio, United States. She was as a doctor's daughter.
Nancy Ford Cones was born on September 11, 1869 in Milan, Ohio, United States. She was as a doctor's daughter.
When she was 25, her father sent her to a photographic studio to learn how to retouch after which Nancy Ford Cones began taking photographs herself in the pictorial style. Impressed by her early work, her father bought her an interest in a studio in Mechanicsburg, Ohio.
Nancy Ford Cones and her husband first moved to Covington, Kentucky where they ran a studio together before settling at Roads Inn farm near Loveland, Ohio in 1905. That year, with a photograph title "Threading the needle", she finished second to Eduard Steichen in an Eastman Kodak competition which attracted 28,000 entries. Her "Calling The Ferryman" came in first in the Photo-Era contest in 1907.
Most of her photographs were of family and friends on the farm. They proved popular for the advertising campaigns of Eastman Kodak, Bausch & Lomb and other camera firms. Some of them also appeared in Country Life in America and Woman's Home Companion. In 1926, the couple spent a year in Mariemont, Ohio, where they had been commissioned to photograph the new town.
Nancy Cones' interest in photography came to an end after her husband's death in 1939. She remained on the Loveland family farm where she died in 1962.
In 1900, Nancy Ford Cones married James Cones, also a photographer, who assisted her with darkroom work, frequently using the gum bichromate printing process.