ralphrepo
Example Of A Coiffure On A Tartar Or Manchu Female, Frontview, Peking, Pechili Province, China [1869] John Thomson [RESTORED]
Entitled: (Front view) Example Of A Coiffure On A Tartar Or Manchu Female, who is wearing a long sleeved quilted garment. The hair is wrapped around a flat strip of wood. Peking, Pechili Province, China [1869] J Thomson [RESTORED] Extensive repair work to the sleeves and face, the background was simply stripped, adjustments in contrast and tonality.
Here's another John Thomson classic (albeit with extensive restoration), found again within Wellcome's fantastic collection of his work. Thomson has continued to enthrall people after a century; his work has recently returned to China, where many Chinese for the first time are seeing the essence of their forebears through his eternal artistry. Wellcome's Thomson collection can be found here:
library.wellcome.ac.uk/node267.html
This girl actually appeared in several of Thomson's pictures. It was apparent that he spent some time in photographing a team of Manchu models both in their natural surrounds and in front of a portable backdrop. In essence my personal suspicion is that his process was remarkably similar to a modern day photo shoot. Of course, he didn't have electronic flashes or digital film, but instead had to look under a dark cloth at an upside down reversed image on a dim matte glass plate. Photography in those days was genuinely a monumental undertaking.
As a amateur historian, I know that retouching is a blatant taboo. However, as a photographer and artist looking at a beautiful girl, I found the urge to clean up the image too much to resist. I started simply wanting to remove the big smudge off her forehead, and before I knew it, I was already reconstructing her sleeves, LOL...
The original unretouched image can be seen here:
www.flickr.com/photos/ralphrepo_photolog/3974179434/
Imagine that; being captivated and enthralled by a woman that's probably been dead for over a century. I guess some beauty is indeed timeless.
Example Of A Coiffure On A Tartar Or Manchu Female, Frontview, Peking, Pechili Province, China [1869] John Thomson [RESTORED]
Entitled: (Front view) Example Of A Coiffure On A Tartar Or Manchu Female, who is wearing a long sleeved quilted garment. The hair is wrapped around a flat strip of wood. Peking, Pechili Province, China [1869] J Thomson [RESTORED] Extensive repair work to the sleeves and face, the background was simply stripped, adjustments in contrast and tonality.
Here's another John Thomson classic (albeit with extensive restoration), found again within Wellcome's fantastic collection of his work. Thomson has continued to enthrall people after a century; his work has recently returned to China, where many Chinese for the first time are seeing the essence of their forebears through his eternal artistry. Wellcome's Thomson collection can be found here:
library.wellcome.ac.uk/node267.html
This girl actually appeared in several of Thomson's pictures. It was apparent that he spent some time in photographing a team of Manchu models both in their natural surrounds and in front of a portable backdrop. In essence my personal suspicion is that his process was remarkably similar to a modern day photo shoot. Of course, he didn't have electronic flashes or digital film, but instead had to look under a dark cloth at an upside down reversed image on a dim matte glass plate. Photography in those days was genuinely a monumental undertaking.
As a amateur historian, I know that retouching is a blatant taboo. However, as a photographer and artist looking at a beautiful girl, I found the urge to clean up the image too much to resist. I started simply wanting to remove the big smudge off her forehead, and before I knew it, I was already reconstructing her sleeves, LOL...
The original unretouched image can be seen here:
www.flickr.com/photos/ralphrepo_photolog/3974179434/
Imagine that; being captivated and enthralled by a woman that's probably been dead for over a century. I guess some beauty is indeed timeless.