• Welcome to Photrio!
    Registration is fast and free. Join today to unlock search, see fewer ads, and access all forum features.
    Click here to sign up

The hand-coloured photographs from Japan

mooseontheloose

Moderator
Allowing Ads
Joined
Sep 20, 2007
Messages
4,110
Location
Kyoto, Japan
Format
Multi Format
I really enjoy the Darkroom series produced by Vox, and I found their latest one on 19th-century hand-painted photographs to be really interesting. Made me realize that I should explore this a bit more, especially since I live here!

 

pentaxuser

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
May 9, 2005
Messages
20,326
Location
Daventry, No
Format
35mm
Interesting, thanks. some of those were real works of art. Professional hand-coloured photos were popular throughout the 50s in the U.K. especially portraits and a studio such as the one owned by Chambre Hardman in Liverpool had a small army of colourists( nearly 100% female and working for next to nothing) dotted around the city whereby a b&w portraitiwas taken one day processed and printed the same day then sent out to a colourist the next morning and might even have been collected the same day then framed if required. So maybe as little as 2 days between taking and handing over to the customer

I suspect that production of colour photos in this way was, at the time, cheaper and more reliable than an actual colour neg and print.

pentaxuser
 

halfaman

Subscriber
Allowing Ads
Joined
Sep 22, 2012
Messages
1,506
Location
Bilbao
Format
Multi Format
I saw a similar video of a southamerican craftsman, the last of its kind, that retouched and put color on B/W prints by hand. They were 100% potraits and I remember the result was more near to painting than to photography.
 

Vaughn

Subscriber
Allowing Ads
Joined
Dec 13, 2006
Messages
10,275
Location
Humboldt Co.
Format
Large Format
Interesting that the Japanese handcoloring was heavily influenced by the existing art of coloring woodblock prints. The same was happening at Europe at the time, but seems to be influenced more by painting. Perhaps to Westerners, imitating painting was of greater import, than to use transparent watercolors.

I have a couple of hand-colored photographs by Wallace Nutting ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wallace_Nutting ) that I grew up with -- definitely in the Western style of turning a photograph into a painting. Very popular as wedding presents -- he had a 'factory' pumping them out.