Our Most Stunning Antique Photos of Women Around the World - From National Geographic Photo Gallery/news.nationalgeographic.com
"An early form of color photography called autochrome gave pictures a "wonderful luminosity."
In 1907, brothers Auguste and Louis Lumière developed the first commercially viable form of color photography. Their process, called autochrome, used glass plates coated with millions of microscopic color filters, each one consisting ofbelieve it or nota dyed, powdered grain of potato starch.
The starch grains essentially transformed the plate into a stained-glass window made of red, green, and blue dots, which filtered the light shining onto a light-sensitive emulsion. Up close, the resulting photographs looked like dots of various shades of red, blue, and green. But from a distance, viewers eyes blended the colors into muted, dreamlike tonesmaking autochromes look like pointillist paintings.
"That's one thing that's unique about the autochromes that you don't see with modern photosthat beautiful painterly look," says Bill Bonner, image collection archivist at National Geographic...."
Brimming with Joy
Three women living in an alpine village near Salzburg, Austria, pose for photographer Hans Hildenbrand in a 1929 autochrome. This photo ran in National Geographics September 1988 centennial issue.
Richard
"An early form of color photography called autochrome gave pictures a "wonderful luminosity."
In 1907, brothers Auguste and Louis Lumière developed the first commercially viable form of color photography. Their process, called autochrome, used glass plates coated with millions of microscopic color filters, each one consisting ofbelieve it or nota dyed, powdered grain of potato starch.
The starch grains essentially transformed the plate into a stained-glass window made of red, green, and blue dots, which filtered the light shining onto a light-sensitive emulsion. Up close, the resulting photographs looked like dots of various shades of red, blue, and green. But from a distance, viewers eyes blended the colors into muted, dreamlike tonesmaking autochromes look like pointillist paintings.
"That's one thing that's unique about the autochromes that you don't see with modern photosthat beautiful painterly look," says Bill Bonner, image collection archivist at National Geographic...."
Brimming with Joy
Three women living in an alpine village near Salzburg, Austria, pose for photographer Hans Hildenbrand in a 1929 autochrome. This photo ran in National Geographics September 1988 centennial issue.
Richard
Our Most Stunning Antique Photos of Women Around the World
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