Three Trees with Full Saturation
The Photochrom technique for printing "colour" images started in the late 1880s. As I said previously it required three black and white negatives to be colourised Red, Green and Blue (RGB).
I could give you a range of different results, but I'm only going to show you a couple of outcomes. I have used the same black and white image in each case so that we can make a genuine comparison. In this case we have three fully saturated images and when combined we get the result above.
It is an interesting comparison with the 50 percent saturation. In this fully saturated version we get a sky that appears in the clouds to have some colour about it, but the blue in this case seems to balance the red.
Three Trees with Full Saturation
The Photochrom technique for printing "colour" images started in the late 1880s. As I said previously it required three black and white negatives to be colourised Red, Green and Blue (RGB).
I could give you a range of different results, but I'm only going to show you a couple of outcomes. I have used the same black and white image in each case so that we can make a genuine comparison. In this case we have three fully saturated images and when combined we get the result above.
It is an interesting comparison with the 50 percent saturation. In this fully saturated version we get a sky that appears in the clouds to have some colour about it, but the blue in this case seems to balance the red.