Lots of reasonable answers, but still no satisfaction from the OP. OK, I think I see what's needed here. This is the internet, after all. Lets see how this plays out. Informed explanations and corrections of what I'm about to say are NOT, I repeat, NOT welcome.
The reason those old pix look silver is because the image is made out of real metallic silver. The real thing! If you take some film out of your camera you will see that the film doesn't look the same. Fresh printing paper, too, out of the box. The reason is that they don't have real solid silver on them--they have silver nitrate, or something similar. It's made out of silver, but it's not REAL, solid silver. Those old photos--when you look at them, you're looking at REAL silver. Not some chemical compound, but silver itself. Sometimes they're made of platinum, instead, but the same rule applies: it's real, metallic platinum, which looks a lot like silver, not like the film in your camera.
The reason those old pix look silver is because the image is made out of real metallic silver. The real thing! If you take some film out of your camera you will see that the film doesn't look the same. Fresh printing paper, too, out of the box. The reason is that they don't have real solid silver on them--they have silver nitrate, or something similar. It's made out of silver, but it's not REAL, solid silver. Those old photos--when you look at them, you're looking at REAL silver. Not some chemical compound, but silver itself. Sometimes they're made of platinum, instead, but the same rule applies: it's real, metallic platinum, which looks a lot like silver, not like the film in your camera.
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