View Full Version : early colour work
tim atherton
27-Oct-2005, 20:46
Interesting blog entry on early colour photography
http://www.jmcolberg.com/weblog/archives/001835.html#001835
Bill_1856
27-Oct-2005, 22:30
Thanks, Tim. Good color, (actually colour, I suppose), but the quality of the photography would have embarrassed Olan Mills.
Donald Brewster
27-Oct-2005, 23:21
Interesting bit of history. On the web you can never tell about quality, particularly with colour (and old colour even more so), so I'll say the Olan Mills comment was a bit harsh. Let's just say the style is a little dated.
tim atherton
27-Oct-2005, 23:39
talking of old colour - someone just passed these along - Capa's WWII colour work:
http://www.magnumphotos.com/c/htm/FramerT_MAG.aspx?Stat=Features_DocThumb&V=CDocT&E=2K7O3R1Y3CVM&DT=ALB
or
http://tinyurl.com/c9rhg
Craig Wactor
27-Oct-2005, 23:52
Thanks, Tim. Good color, (actually colour, I suppose), but the quality of the photography would have embarrassed Olan Mills.
I don't know, that Yousuf Karsh is pretty nice...
Mike Kovacs
28-Oct-2005, 00:05
The Capa stuff looks pretty awesome, and I'm guessing that most was shot on his prewar 35mm Contax rangefinders going by the grain in the skies.
These are a favourite of mine and I've become quite adept at restoring them. (gotta show one, forum choice of LF aside...beautiful!) I've shot some great colour slides with uncoated Sonnar lenses.
http://www3.sympatico.ca/mskovacs/pv/GeorgeB_ContaxII-6.jpg
Larry Gebhardt
28-Oct-2005, 00:25
I didn't know the world even got colorized until after WWII. Sure is strange to see Capa's photos with vivid colors. It sure changes the mood of the period.
tim atherton
28-Oct-2005, 00:48
I think I've also posted thes before
autochromes etc
http://www.mediatheque-patrimoine.culture.gouv.fr/fr/archives_photo/visites_guidees/autochromes.html
(there are links to images on there)
http://www.network54.com/Forum/thread?forumid=211833&messageid=1088370788&lp=1088381193
(big page)
and
http://www.stern.de/politik/historie/index.html?id=530477&nv=fs&cp=1
tim atherton
28-Oct-2005, 00:58
and of course pre-revolutionary Russia
(I must say I find lots of this early colour stuff quite fascinating)
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/empire/
http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/0105/russia.html
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/empire/images/p87-8086.jpg
Bill_1856
28-Oct-2005, 02:04
Tim, for me the most interesting aspect of the Russian photographs has always been that he used tri-color sensitive plates with enough speed to do instantious shots. I thought at that time such emulsions were color blind (blue sensitive only).
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