Omega Owners Forum

Chat Area => General Discussion Area => Topic started by: Rods2 on 24 June 2013, 14:33:40

Title: WWI Colour photographs
Post by: Rods2 on 24 June 2013, 14:33:40
Colour photography was invented in 1855, with the first known three colour picture taken by Thomas Sutton in 1861. Early pictures used 3 colour filters and black and white plates, which is why they are all stills. During the 1930's advances were made in colour film technology, which allowed for much greater adoption.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_photography (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_photography)

There are collections of WWI colour photographs, here are some link to a french archive where most of the colour photographs in WWI was taken by a French photographer.

http://www.worldwaronecolorphotos.com/ (http://www.worldwaronecolorphotos.com/)

The colour photography certainly brings the horror much closer than the monochrome photographs we are used to seeing!
Title: Re: WWI Colour photographs
Post by: symes on 24 June 2013, 22:16:15
Wow didn't know colour about then :o :o really good clear images--they look like they could have been taken days ago
Title: Re: WWI Colour photographs
Post by: Sir Tigger KC on 24 June 2013, 22:45:26
Fascinating!!  :y  Those are better images than the black and whites that we usually see from that era!  :)
Title: Re: WWI Colour photographs
Post by: chrisgixer on 24 June 2013, 22:53:08
Much more vivid than the restored to colour films of world war 2, on one of the documentary channels not so long ago. All very interesting IMO. :)
Title: Re: WWI Colour photographs
Post by: Lizzie_Zoom on 25 June 2013, 17:33:04
Great photos, but unfortunately they do not show images of the putrid, flooded, shell holed battlefields of Passchendaele, with decaying bodies of all types, and all conditions, in an endless sea of mud.

Now they would be highly informative of the situation my great uncle Wally faced and died in at Ypres during 1917,  that all too many poor souls had to also endure.

In colour everything seems more real somehow.