Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jan 30, 2017 20:06:56 GMT
These postcards of the Princely County of Tyrol, an Alpine region of the Austro-Hungarian empire, were created using the Photochrom process, an early procedure for imbuing monochrome images with surprisingly lifelike color. Developed in the 1880s by an employee of a Swiss printing company, the process involves coating a lithographic limestone tablet with a photosensitive emulsion and exposing it to light under a photo negative. The light causes the emulsion to harden in proportion to the tones of the negative, forming a fixed lithographic image on the stone. Additional stones are prepared for each tint to be used in the ultimate color image — a single postcard might require over a dozen. The end product of this painstaking process is color images with a unique degree of verisimilitude for a time when true color photography was just being developed. These images capture the staggering peaks and valleys of Tyrol in the decades before it was partitioned between Italy and Austria with the end of World War I. Much more with pictures here:
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geriatrix
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Post by geriatrix on Jan 30, 2017 22:19:56 GMT
Really amazing! I remember the primitive way black & white Norwegian postcards were treated to mimic colour photos until the 1960s. Not very realistic, to say the least, but these are true pieces of art! Here is one to illustrate my point, but I've actually seen worse...
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Post by Deleted on Jan 30, 2017 22:58:33 GMT
That is cool!
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