Originally posted by: ed21x
Originally posted by: CrackRabbit
Originally posted by: Amused
Originally posted by: CrackRabbit
Originally posted by: Ketteringo
They didnt have colors back then?
I hope my sarcasm meter is broken otherwise you need a good smacking with a trout.
There WERE color cameras back then. Only they were quite rare and expensive.
That's why there are some, not many, but some color photos and films from WWII. Nearly all are American, though. Some are German. There are none that I have seen from Russia or Japan though.
Hmm.. I thought most of the color photos from that era were "colorized" in a lab, not taken with a color camera. Hence why most of them are sephia-toned.
actually no, there actually were color cameras back then- National Geographic was one of the first major periodicals to use them, albeit sparingly cuz the photography community during that period thought that color was less classy than B&W
😕 The Sepia tone is what happens when a pic has been oxidized by lying out in the air too long. It usually takes quite a few years for that to happen, though much less time with a polaroid.