Autochromes are coloured transparent images on glass, similar to a slide, with deeply luminous colours and soft image outlines. They are viewed by being held up ...
An autochrome is the result of an additive color process and is a unique photograph—a positive transparency on a glass support—with colors composed of minute ...
The Autochrome process, introduced in France in 1907 by Auguste and Louis Lumière, was the first practical colour photography process. It used a colour screen ( ...
The Autochrome, a positive color transparency on glass, was invented by Auguste and Louis Lumière in 1907 and manufactured by them until 1933. Autochromes were ...
Invented by Auguste and Louis Lumière in 1903 and released to the public in 1907, autochromes offered the first practically applicable color-photography ...
The Lumière Autochrome, invented and marketed by brothers Auguste and Louis Lumière, was the world's first practical color photography process. The Art of ...