19 May 2012, 08:54 PM
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#3 (permalink)
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Two-seater Pilot
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Central Texas
Posts: 130
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When I first saw these I thought they must surely be skillfully hand tinted prints, but that is not the case. Per Wikipedia:
"The first commercially successful color [photographic] process, the Lumière Autochrome, invented by the French Lumière brothers, reached the market in 1907....The shortcomings of the Autochrome process were the expense (one plate cost about as much as a dozen black-and-white plates of the same size), the relatively long exposure times which made hand-held "snapshots" and photographs of moving subjects impractical, and the density of the finished image due to the presence of the light-absorbing color screen.
Viewed under optimum conditions and by daylight as intended, a well-made and well-preserved Autochrome can look startlingly fresh and vivid. Unfortunately, modern film and digital copies are usually made with a highly diffused light source, which causes loss of color saturation and other ill effects..., and by fluorescent [if you have fluorescent lights to light your collection, get rid of them as they are very bad news!] or other artificial light which alters the color balance. The capabilities of the process should not be judged by the dull, washed-out, odd-colored reproductions commonly seen.
Millions of Autochrome plates were manufactured and used during the quarter century before the plates were replaced by film-based versions in the 1930s." (Bracketed language in the quote is mine, parentheticals are part of the original quote.)
Thanks very much for posting these, especially the Nieuport with it's camouflage coloring. Until now I had no idea at all that color photography even existed, other than via hand tinting, in 1914. Surely, there must be many, many more such photos out there. Does anyone know of a body or collection of such photos from WW1, for instance, something along the lines of the large collection of photos produced by Matthew Brady during the US War of Northern Aggression?
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Strategic Air Command
Peace was our profession: war was just a hobby.
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