From then on, he worked as a painter of
portrait miniatures in London, and also
Essex, and in 1832 in
Winchester. He exhibited 113 portrait miniatures between 1786 and 1832, principally at the Royal Academy, and had a reputation for creating a good likeness. (1800–1895), showing from left to right Charles Hayter (father of John and George),
John Hayter,
Edwin Landseer and
George Hayter (Shipley Art Gallery, UK) Charles Hayter taught
perspective (on which he was an authority) to
Princess Charlotte, King
George IV's daughter, to whom he was later appointed
Professor in Perspective and Drawing. He also dedicated to her his book
An Introduction to perspective, adapted to the capacities of youth, in a series of pleasing and familiar dialogues, first published in 1813 in London. He later published
A New Practical Treatise on the Three Primitive Colours Assumed as a Perfect System of Rudimentary Information (London 1826), in which he described how all colours could be obtained from just three. An album containing 443 studies for miniature portraits is in the
Victoria and Albert Museum. Hayter noted inside the cover that these were sketches which he 'placed behind the Ivory, which being transparent, gave the artist the aid in making his outline on the ivory'. == Personal life ==