: Passengers like Kate Odell captured candid moments of daily life on board using Kodak Brownie cameras, which were then a relatively new technology for the middle class.

: The last known photograph of the Titanic afloat was taken at Crosshaven, County Cork, as it headed into the open Atlantic.

The most iconic historical images were captured by passengers who disembarked at early stops in Cherbourg or Queenstown (now Cobh), Ireland.

: First photographed in detail in 1986, the bow remains the most recognizable part of the wreck, though recent 2024 expeditions show a significant section of its famous railing has finally collapsed to the seafloor.

Images of the RMS Titanic bridge a century of human history, shifting from the grainy black-and-white snapshots of its 1912 maiden voyage to haunting, high-definition digital scans of its decay. Because the ship rests 12,500 feet below the surface in total darkness, photography has always been the primary way the public connects with the "unsinkable" legend. The Last Glances (1912)

Beyond the ship itself, recovered images and artifacts tell intimate human stories: Titanic: A Photographic Record From 1912 to 2024

: In 2023, researchers used over 700,000 images to create a full-sized 3D "digital twin" of the wreck. This allows historians to see the ship as if the water had been drained away, revealing minute details like the serial number on a propeller.

Since its discovery in 1985, deep-sea photography has documented the ship's transformation into a "rusticle"-covered relic.