Keo, I have no idea what is going on here. I know that AgI is bright yellow.
PE
Hmm, I have no idea if this works or if I'm missing a context clue for the original post. However, I was revisiting this idea yesterday and wanted to know more about photochromism. After reading about it more I found that Transition lenses, that are made out of glass and not polycarbonate, uses silver chloride and copper chloride in the glass itself. I wonder if the photo-redox would take place without the glass; my thoughts are to melt the two salts together. Alternatively, could abandon metal salts and go to an azo dye, but I'm not a chemist and am not set up for that sort of magic.
Now I wonder if Copper Chloride and Silver Chloride are dissolved in a solvent would the same transition from clear to black take place? If it does, a potential vanishing and appearing picture could be made through the use of a gelatin coated paper sensitized with bichromate, the same process that is used to make "Sympathetic Photographs" using cobalt chloride salts. I might be over complicating things and sort of landed on a solution to achieve the effect above.
Photochromic pigments are readily available and I can not see why it couldn't be used to be ground into a watercolor paint and used in a gum bichromate process, carbon, etc.
Just wanted to give an update on some food for thought.