This guy was so far ahead of his time, that it would be the equivalent of Leonardo DaVinci creating the iPad.

Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii was a Russian photographer who, in the early years of the 20th century, found a way to create color images from monochromatic photography.Β He would expose three images on glass photographic plates, shooting each of the three images with a colored filter.Β Then, he would project the images onto a screen – showing each image through that same colored filter – and lo and behold, we now have a color image!Β In fact, over 2000 of Prokudin-Gorskii’s glass plates have survived and are in the holdings of the Smithsonian Institution, who have carefully scanned each image and restored the colors in a process called digichromatography.
Take a look at the images below.Β What you’re seeing is Alim Khan, the Emir of Bukhara; he sat while Prokudin-Gorskii took his picture with a special three-lensed camera of Prokudin-Gorskii’s own invention – with each lens using a different filter.Β Β Then, Prokudin-Gorskii would take his plates back to his darkroom – which happened to be in his private railroad car, another benefit of being the official photographer to the Tsar – and developed the images. And on the right – is the Emir of Bukhara, in full visual color.
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| At left: the original plates of Alim Khan, Emir of Bukhara, seated holding sword. At right: the reconstructed photo.Β Photo by Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii. Image from the Library of Congress, http://www.loc.gov | |
Is that not astounding or what?
Okay, time to break out the experiment tools.
The constants:
- Nikon F100 35mm camera, with a 50mm f/1.4 Nikkor lens.
- Three screw-in filters; a Bower Red 2, a Tiffen Green and a Tiffen Blue.
- Four rolls of 35mm black-and-white film – Svema 64 film; ORWO NP55 film; Efke KB50 film and Kodak BW400CN film.
- My tripod, so that each of the three shots are taken from the exact same spot.
- And finally – something standing completely still and full of color.
For each subject, I first took a shot without any filters – or, essentially, I just used a “white” filter.
Then I added a Red filter – shot.Β Then a Green filter – shot.Β And then a Blue filter – shot.Β Β This order must remain consistent throughout each attempt.Β White.Β Red.Β Green. Blue.Β W.R.G.B. Heck, I can remember this as easily as counting to six.
Saturday morning, bright and early.Β I drove to the North Country and shot a few pictures here and there – used up the ORWO quickly, then ran through the Svema and the Kodak.Β On Sunday, I took some more pictures, this time shooting in Halfmoon and Waterford along Route 32 – used the Efke film for that.
While I had to wait for McGreevy Pro Lab to open up on Monday morning before I could develop the non-Kodak film, I knew that since Kodak’s B&W film could be developed in a C-41 mixture, I took that cartridge of film over to Ritz Camera in Crossgates Mall, and let them do their magic.Β A half hour later, the film was developed and paid for.
I scanned in each image, one by one, starting with a picture of a church in Porter Corners.Β Here’s what it looks like as just a regular church with a regular photograph, on left; and at right, the three red-white-blue B&W photos combined as one.
Holy… okay, Chuck, it’s best not to use the words “Holy” and a barnyard expletive when one is discussing a photograph of a church. ‘Kay?Β ‘Kay.
This was the first developed “test picture.”Β I have to make sure that all three images are accurately aligned; even a pixel off one way or the other will cause the photo to look like a bad silk-screening.Β And there’s nothing I can do about the clouds in the sky, short of either shooting when the sky is completely blue, or asking God to make the clouds hold still until I finish photographing.Β Yeah, like that’ll work.
Meanwhile, I dropped off my three other B&W films – the ORWO, the Svema and the Efke – at McGreevy Pro Lab for development.Β Β Yep, folks, say it with me.Β It’s not a Monday morning until Chuck drops some film off at McGreevy.Β Joe Putrock took my order.Β I explained my plans for this film.Β “Oh yeah,” he replied.Β “There was a Russian guy who did this 100 years ago, he’s still considered the first color photographer.”
I smiled.Β Joe knew what I was planning and how I wanted to do it.
On Tuesday afternoon, I got my films back.Β Three rolls, all developed, no bad films in the batch.
First, I’m going to show you the straight “white filter” image – the one that if you just pointed the camera at a subject without any filters, you would get this.
And after I combined the red – green – blue images that were taken immediately after taking the “white filter” image, here’s what I came up with.
Results – promising. Very promising.Β Better than I expected, but I have to work on alignments – especially if I ever decide to use the Svema on this – so that it doesn’t look like a photo clipped from page 1C of USA Today.Β And I think I’m going to need a stronger blue filter – that water in the Waterford Bridge picture looks like it was filtered through chocolate.
Still, I like how this turned out, and I’m going to experiment with it some more.
Π‘ΠΏΠ°ΡΠΈΠ±ΠΎ, Π‘Π΅ΡΠ³Π΅ΜΠΉ ΠΠΈΡ Π°ΜΠΉΠ»ΠΎΠ²ΠΈΡ ΠΡΠΎΠΊΡΜΠ΄ΠΈΠ½-ΠΠΎΜΡΡΠΊΠΈΠΉβ. ΠΠ΅Π½Ρ Π²Π΄ΠΎΡ Π½ΠΎΠ²Π»ΡΠ΅Ρ Π²Π°ΡΡ ΡΠ°Π±ΠΎΡΡ.












Interesting — and very similar to the Technicolor process. Here’s a nice gallery that shows more of the Prokudin-Gorskii pictures:
http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2010/08/russia_in_color_a_century_ago.html
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Pretty sweet. A couple of the images remind me of the days of messing around with sheets of Kodalith images, offsetting them a bit to make bas reliefs.
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Neat. The crazy sky makes the church look like it has been taken over by the esoteric order of dagon.
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+5 to Texas Pynchon for the HP Lovecraft reference.
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Hmm, think I’ll change my login to Abdul Alhazred. π
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I didn’t know this kind of thing was possible. This just might be the most interesting post I’ve read on the TU blogs!
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I love Sergei Prokudin’s work and you are a very good talented photographer, my question is this,if i have a b&w old digital photo can i do this(your work) using the 4 filters WRGB in Photoshop?i hate to colour photos manually is to much time consuming and my hand gets tire of being moving the PC mouse and i m afraid to get tendonitis, i heared about a software called Black magic what do you think about this software and explain your work using photoshop THANK YOU Alberto
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