From the very first color photo taken in 1861 to the streets of Paris during World War I, these incredible early color photographs offer a window into the past.
Wikimedia Commons Library of Congress/Flickr Wikimedia Commons Library of Congress trialsanderrors/Flickr Library of Congress Library of Congress/Flickr Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images trialsanderrors/Flickr trialsanderrors/Flickr Library of Congress Library of Congress Library of Congress Wikimedia Commons SSPL/Getty Images Royal Photographic Society / Getty Images trialsanderrors/Flickr trialsanderrors/Flickr Wikimedia Commons Wikimedia Commons Australian War Memorial Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images Library of Congress, Flickr Royal Photographic Society / Getty Images dalbera/Flickr Musée Albert-Kahn Library of Congress internetarchivebookimages/Flickr Wikimedia Commons Wikimedia Commons george_eastman_house/Flickr Detroit Publishing Company/Wikimedia Commons Library of Congress Musée Albert-Kahn Wikimedia Commons Library of Congress Alfred Stieglitz/The Metropolitan Museum of Art The Royal Photographic Society Collection/National Science and Media Museum/SSPL/Getty Images george_eastman_house/Flickr Library of Congress Musée Albert-Kahn Library of Congress The Royal Photographic Society Collection/National Science and Media Museum/SSPL/Getty Images Library of Congress Alfred Stieglitz/Wikimedia Commons Library of Congress Library of Congress/Flickr Wikimedia Commons inferno55/Flickr alberta_archives/Flickr Detroit Publishing Company/Wikimedia Commons Getty Images Library of Congress/flickr Library of Congress Etheldreda Laing/Getty Images Library of Congress Wikimedia Commons John Cimon Warburg/Getty Images The Royal Photographic Society Collection/National Science and Media Museum/SSPL/Getty Images Library of Congress/Flickr George Eastman Museum/Flickr Library of Congress Wikimedia Commons Library of Congress Detroit Publishing Company/Wikimedia Commons statelibraryofnsw/Flickr Wikimedia Commons Alfonse Van Besten Library of Congress George Eastman House/Charles Zoller/The Image Works Library of Congress whatsthatpicture/Flickr The Royal Photographic Society Collection/National Science and Media Museum/SSPL/Getty Images Library of Congress Library of Congress/Flickr george_eastman_house/Flickr george_eastman_house/Flickr These 77 Images Are Some Of The World’s First Color Photos View GalleryAlthough it's difficult to imagine life before the first color photographs, the first time people saw any photo at all was nearly two centuries ago — in 1839.
The Daguerreotype, invented that year by Louis Daguerre — and built on previous inventions made by inventors like Joseph Nicéphore Niépce — was one of the main monochrome photo processes. Popular worldwide, it required iodine-sensitive, silver-plated sheets of copper and only a few seconds of exposure.
However, the public became easily bored with black-and-white photography — even just a few years after its invention. Where was the vibrant color that existed in reality?
The race to take the first color photo was on. Labeled the holy grail of the photography world, scientists and experimenters alike tinkered with different processing methods for over 20 years before finally discovering a reliable color photography method.
The Famous Tartan Ribbon Color Photo
Sir Isaac Newton used a prism to split sunlight in 1666, so long before the first color photos, we knew that light was a combination of seven colors. The difficulties facing the pioneers of color photography had to do with impracticality, long exposure times, unwanted dye spread, and expense.
In 1861 a Scottish physicist and polymath named James Clerk Maxwell discovered that by mixing red, green, and blue light, any color can be made. This is now referred to as the three-color process.
Using this as a strategy for coloring photos, Maxwell asked photographer Thomas Sutton to take three snapshots of a tartan-colored ribbon. He used filters in these colors and took the photos in bright sunlight.
The three photographs were developed, printed on glass, then projected onto a screen with three different projectors, each with an additional filter with the same color used in each original photo. Although Maxwell wasn't aware of it at the time, the emulsions he used were insensitive to red light. Fortunately, the red cloth used in the ribbon reflected ultraviolet light — so it registered in the final emulsion.
Even though Maxwell was not a photographer and he did this for a physics presentation, he again proved Isaac Newton's color theory and this three-color process unlocked the first key in creating the first color photos.
THe result of this experiment is widely regarded as the world's first color photograph, and it's located in the National Media Museum in Bradford.
Still, despite this early success, it would take a few more decades until color photography became more commonplace.
Failed Experiments In Color Photography
Many times experimenters produced a color photo, however, the color would fade almost immediately when exposed to light. Solving the emulsion sensitivity problem remained elusive.
Dr. John Joly of Dublin created the Joly process in 1894. It involved a filter that combined a plate with all three key colors, exposure, reversal processing, and finished with another filter screen. This process was not very reliable, and it definitely lacked practicality.
Frederick Ives created the Kromogram in 1897. These were transparencies that needed a special viewer called a Kromskop. The complexity and the need for a separate viewer meant this process never caught fire the way Ives hoped. The rush to create the first color photos continued.
In the meantime, professional photographers grew impatient with waiting, as their customers clamored for color. They took to hand-painting their photos. This was fairly simple and cheap to do. So much so, that even after the invention of practical color photography, hand-painting remained popular.
The Color Photography Explosion
By the last decade of the nineteenth century, several color processes existed; although none of them practical. However, things were about to escalate very quickly.
The Photochrom was the earliest color photo process that a few professional photography companies used. They produced photochroms of famous places — mostly for tourism and catalog purposes.
However, this process used the hand-coloring of negatives — and is actually a hybrid of photography and printing. Photochroms continued to gain popularity through the 1890s.
Finally, the Lumière brothers burst on the scene. Auguste and Louis invented the Cinematograph in 1895 — the motion picture film camera. They too had a color photo process, and they called it Autochrome when they patented it in 1903. The trick they had up their sleeve was combining the emulsion and filter on the same glass. Dyed potato starch was used to make their filter plate.
The Autochrome process was easy to use, and it worked with existing cameras. The longest exposure time was just 30 seconds in the worst of conditions — unlike some earlier processes that needed hours.
One of the hallmarks of images made using microscopic potato starch are the visible clumps of dye that often formed. Many believe this adds a subtle artistic element to the photographs.
The Autochrome was released commercially in 1907 and it was the holy grail of color until 1936 when Kodachrome introduced their practical multi-layer color film.
These very first color photos are part of the evolving history of photography — and mesmerizing to look at.
Next, Check out these rarely seen color photos from World War II. Then, experience these 21 stunning colorized portraits of what's likely the oldest generation ever photographed.
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