I have just created a Wikipedia page for photo-crayotypes and chromatypes but the current focus is on Australian uses by photographers like Frederick Frith and Douglas Kilburn. If anyone has more research they can add from the UK that would be great. Happy to help if you are not using Wikipedia regularly.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photo-crayotype
You need to be a member of British Photographic History to add comments!
Obituary: Paddy Summerfield (1947-2024) - 'the most photographic person I have ever known'
Posted by Michael Pritchard on April 15, 2024 at 21:40
Event: John Ruskin’s daguerreotype photography / 16 May 2024
Posted by Graham Hogg on April 22, 2024 at 9:17
Job: Project cataloguer photography / closes 30 April 2024
Posted by Michael Pritchard on April 21, 2024 at 21:00
National Media Museum changes direction as collections move to V&A London
Posted by Michael Pritchard on January 31, 2016 at 10:30
Christina: her identity is revealed after 102 years
Posted by Michael Pritchard on June 11, 2015 at 21:00
Barnardo's archive 'up for grabs' or destruction (UPDATE 3)
Posted by Michael Pritchard on July 30, 2013 at 13:00
Blog Topics by Tags
- news (108)
- photography (48)
- exhibition (26)
- job (16)
- Photography (16)
- NMeM (15)
- British (14)
- and (13)
- London (13)
Monthly Archives
2024
- April (27)
- March (37)
- February (33)
- January (27)
2023
- December (24)
- November (18)
- October (35)
- September (26)
- August (20)
- July (26)
- June (27)
- May (22)
- April (28)
- March (29)
- February (20)
- January (31)
2022
- December (18)
- November (35)
- October (27)
- September (20)
- August (17)
- July (25)
- June (28)
- May (25)
- April (17)
- March (19)
- February (28)
- January (25)
2021
- December (19)
- November (26)
- October (37)
- September (35)
- August (20)
- July (21)
- June (24)
- May (34)
- April (20)
- March (34)
- February (29)
- January (25)
2020
- December (23)
- November (42)
- October (31)
- September (23)
- August (20)
- July (29)
- June (24)
- May (21)
- April (25)
- March (11)
- February (29)
- January (17)
2019
- December (9)
- November (24)
- October (24)
- September (25)
- August (19)
- July (16)
- June (21)
- May (26)
- April (33)
- March (22)
- February (29)
- January (24)
2018
- December (20)
- November (26)
- October (20)
- September (30)
- August (18)
- July (25)
- June (25)
- May (17)
- April (26)
- March (29)
- February (29)
- January (21)
2017
- December (19)
- November (23)
- October (30)
- September (22)
- August (21)
- July (21)
- June (20)
- May (25)
- April (23)
- March (23)
- February (15)
- January (17)
2016
- December (20)
- November (16)
- October (32)
- September (21)
- August (7)
- July (19)
- June (22)
- May (25)
- April (19)
- March (24)
- February (17)
- January (19)
2015
- December (19)
- November (17)
- October (20)
- September (17)
- August (23)
- July (22)
- June (30)
- May (15)
- April (28)
- March (24)
- February (28)
- January (16)
2014
- December (28)
- November (22)
- October (24)
- September (18)
- August (20)
- July (24)
- June (18)
- May (22)
- April (27)
- March (16)
- February (13)
- January (28)
2013
- December (16)
- November (27)
- October (37)
- September (25)
- August (20)
- July (28)
- June (30)
- May (28)
- April (31)
- March (25)
- February (22)
- January (36)
2012
- December (28)
- November (31)
- October (33)
- September (45)
- August (41)
- July (40)
- June (29)
- May (35)
- April (32)
- March (43)
- February (46)
- January (36)
2011
- December (25)
- November (38)
- October (42)
- September (49)
- August (32)
- July (30)
- June (40)
- May (43)
- April (36)
- March (36)
- February (58)
- January (42)
2010
- December (30)
- November (51)
- October (38)
- September (24)
- August (20)
- July (29)
- June (25)
- May (34)
- April (20)
- March (26)
- February (21)
- January (15)
2009
- December (6)
- November (7)
- October (13)
- September (8)
- August (10)
- July (12)
- June (8)
- May (13)
- April (15)
- March (14)
- February (7)
- January (15)
Comments
Hi Geoff, very interested in this from the point of view of the solar camera/enlarger (on which I have recently created a Wikipedia article). Many photographers 1860s-1870s enlarged CDV images life-size onto canvas and paper, subsequently to be painted over in oils or coloured in crayon. You describe life-size portraits by Kilburn in your WP article - do you feel it is likely that the solar camera was used in making a significant portion of such coloured portraits? Here's an article describing its quite early use (the device was patented 1860), by Edward Dalton of Sydney:
"A recent and valuable invention in in photography has been brought into successful application at Mr. Dalton'• establishment in George St. We refer to Lile enlargement of portraits, by means of an instrument known as a solar oamera...." The Sydney Morning Herald, Fri, Nov 27, 1863, page 7
Hi Geoff, It's great to have a new wikipedia article related to.colour in photography – thanks!
Hi Marcel, hope you are well. I talked to Noel a year or so ago and we discussed some issues relating Frith's portrait on Wikipedia. The book is a real treat. Cheers Geoff.
Hi Gael - I agree it would be great to see some comparisons as the process appears to have continued into the twentieth century. I'm still pretty much working from home but when I get back on site from Covid I'll follow up with the chromotypes and see if there are any existing conservation reports for the Frith examples in the Library.
Thanks Geoff IT would be great to have other examples in overseas archives to compare. Has a conservator looked at the composition of chromotypes? Gael
Hi Geoff, I helped out with a book on the Friths ("The Frith Family : Snips & Snaps. Nineteenth Century Portaitists, Miniaturists, Caricaturists and Photographic Artists" by Noel Tozer). Frederick's sister Letitia Davidson was a photographer, miniature painter and photo colourist. Cheers! Marcel