
Cleveland Museum of Art
Femmes musulmanes Syriennes à Beyrouth, Costume de Ville
Félix Bonfils
- Date
- c. 1880s
- Medium
- Double sided Photochrom
- Culture
- France
- Department
- Photography
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
To make a photochrom, a photographic negative was transferred onto a lithographic stone, then printers created a minimum of six and up to fifteen different stones, each with a single color of ink, which were printed atop the black-and-white image. The printers creating the colors had never seen the original locale. Photochroms were popular from the 1890s into the 1910s and were most often collected in albums or framed and hung on the wall. In the early 1880s,FélixBonfils was among the first photographers to use the Photocrom process, which producedcolor images from a single black-and-white negative.
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