![]() ![]() Image source: Etheldreda Laing #32 Louis Lumière’s Daughter And Her Dolls, 1913 Image source: John Cimon Warburg #30 Lanchester 38hp Tourer, 1913 Image source: Albert Kahn #29 Joan In Red Riding Hood Cape With Basket, 1907 ![]() Image source: Albert Kahn #28 Bosnia-Herzegovina, Mostar, 1913 Image source: Albert Kahn #27 Mother Of Seven Making Fringes For Knitted Shawls, Galway, Ireland, #26 Sweden, Near Gagnef (Mother And Daughter In Traditional Clothes), 1910 ![]() Image source: Mervyn O’Gorman #25 Apan (Young Samurai), 1912 Image source: Georges Gilon #24 Christina In Red, 1913 Image source: Friedrich Adolf Paneth #23 Family Portrait At Roannay, Belgium, 1913 Image source: Charles Corbet #22 Eva And Heinz On The Shore Of Lake Lucerne, Switzerland, C. Image source: Etheldreda Laing #21 Woman And Girl By A Brook, 1910 Image source: Alfonse Van Besten #20 Two Girls On A Balcony, 1908 Image source: Albert Kahn #19 Van Besten Painting In His Garden, 1912 Image source: Alvin Langdon Coburn #18 Air Balloons, Paris, 1914 Image source: Albert Kahn #17 Autochrome Of Mark Twain, 1908 Image source: Etheldreda Janet Laing #16 Outdoor Market, Paris, 1914 Image source: Léon Busy #15 Two Girls In Oriental Costume, 1908 Image source: Mo #13 Charlie Chaplin, 1918 Image source: Alfonse Van Besten #12 Among The First Coloured Pictures Ever Taken By Louis Lumière, 1907 Image source: Fernand Cuville #11 Young Girl Amidst Marguerites, C. Image source: Léon Gimpel #10 A Girl Holds A Doll Next To Soldiers’ Equipment In Reims, France, 1917 Image source: Albert Kahn #9 The Grenata Street Army, 1915 Image source: Friedrich Paneth #8 Moulin Rouge, Paris, 1914 Image source: John Cimon Warburg #7 Heinz And Eva On The Hillside, 1925 Scroll down for a collection of stunning century-old color photographs using their groundbreaking technique. ![]() Kodachrome was also eventually overtaken by the rise of digital photography (Kodak stopped manufacturing Kodachrome in 2009), which is now by far the world’s most popular way to take pictures, but modern advances in photographic technology wouldn’t have been possible without the hard work of early pioneers like Auguste and Louis Lumière. The brothers revolutionized the world of color photography until Kodak took things to a whole new level with the invention of Kodachrome film in 1935, a lighter and more convenient alternative that quickly made the Autochrome Lumière obsolete (although its popularity continued in France up until the 1950s). Despite being difficult to manufacture and also somewhat expensive, the process was very popular among amateur photographers and one of the world’s first books of color photography was published using the Autochrome Lumière technique. Using dyed grains of potato starch and light-sensitive emulsion, they were able to produce vibrant photographs without the need for additional colorization. #COLORIZE OLD PHOTO PROFESSIONAL#Before 1907, if you wanted a color photograph then you (well, a professional colorist) basically had to color it in using different dyes and pigments, but two French brothers called Auguste and Louis Lumière changed all that with a game-changing process that they called the Autochrome Lumière. ![]()
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