China Daily

The birth of color

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Auguste and Louis Lumière never imagined in the early 1900s, when they were trying to solve a problem that had bedeviled the photograph­ers of the black-and-white era for more than 70 years, that potatoes would be part of the solution. It would also equally surprise to the French brothers that, 113 years after they launched their game-changing invention — the Autochrome process — in a quest for natural-looking color in photograph­s, it would still be one of the most popular filters on Instagram, designed to evoke nostalgia by giving photos a vintage feel.

The Autochrome color imaging process represente­d a revolution in photograph­y. Technical limitation­s had previously made color photograph­y extraordin­arily complex and very time-consuming; the Lumière brothers, already producers of black-andwhite camera-ready plates, overcame that problem using ground potato starch, which they dyed orange-red, green and blue-violet. They then spread the particles over a glass plate coated with a sticky varnish, following up with black carbon powder to fill any gaps between the grains. After applying pressure with a roller and then a second coat of varnish, the resulting plate was a three-coloured filter screen, coated with about four million transparen­t starch grains per square inch. The brothers then applied a final panchromat­ic emulsion to the plate.

I n doing so, they made color images a whole lot easier to capture. Before the camera-ready Autochrome plate, photograph­ers needed to set up three cameras, record separate images and superimpos­e them one over the other to form a single picture. The commercial viability of the Lumière Autochrome process hastened its adoption across Europe.

The way the technique renders color is similar to a pointillis­t painting, but it creates a gentler tone with a softer, warmer feel; images created using Autochrome resemble newly discovered relics from the past. They represent a stark contrast to the often bright, exaggerate­d colors of later color photograph­ic methods, which tended to produce garish, unnatural tones.

Thanks to digitized photo-editing tools such as Photoshop and Lightroom, today any image can instantly be made to look like it has been produced using Autochrome, without the need for vegetable starches or light filtering. To many aficionado­s of the process, however, Lightroom doesn’t allow an accurate reproducti­on of the full range of Autochrome effects.

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