Pre-1900 Monochrome (black and white)
photography was first exemplified by the
daguerreotype in 1839 and later improved by other methods including:
calotype,
ambrotype,
tintype,
albumen print, and
gelatine silver print. The majority of photography remained monochrome until the mid-20th century, although experiments were producing
colour photography as early as 1855 and some photographic processes produced images with an inherent overall colour like the blue of
cyanotypes. In an attempt to create more realistic images, photographers and artists would hand-colour monochrome photographs. The first hand-coloured daguerreotypes are attributed to
Swiss painter and printmaker
Johann Baptist Isenring, who used a mixture of
gum arabic and
pigments to colour daguerreotypes soon after their invention in 1839. Coloured powder was fixed on the delicate surface of the daguerreotype by the application of heat. Variations of this technique were patented in
England by
Richard Beard in 1842 and in
France by Étienne Lecchi in 1842 and Léotard de Leuze in 1845. Later, hand-colouring was used with successive photographic innovations, from albumen and gelatine silver prints to
lantern slides and
transparency photography. Parallel efforts to produce coloured photographic images affected the popularity of hand-colouring. In 1842
Daniel Davis Jr. patented a method for colouring daguerreotypes through
electroplating, and his work was refined by
Warren Thompson the following year. The results of the work of Davis and Thompson were only partially successful in creating colour photographs and the electroplating method was soon abandoned. In 1850
Levi L. Hill announced his invention of a process of daguerreotyping in natural colours in his
Treatise on Daguerreotype. Sales of conventional uncoloured and hand-coloured daguerreotypes fell in anticipation of this new technology. Hill delayed publication of the details of his process for several years, however, and his claims soon came to be considered fraudulent. When he finally did publish his treatise in 1856, the process – whether bona fide or not – was certainly impractical and dangerous. With the advent of photographic emulsions on glass came the potential to make enlargements from them, but for the lack of a sufficiently strong light source to project them on to the receiving emulsion as prints on paper, canvas or other supports. The
solar camera, employing the focussed light of the sun, addressed the problem in a repurposing of the solar microscope by American portrait artist David Acheson Woodward in 1857, and others, before being superseded by enlargers employing artificial light sources from the 1880s. Life-size portraits made by this means were hand coloured in crayon or overpainted in oils and were popular into the 1910s. Hand-colouring remained the easiest and most effective method to produce full-colour photographic images until the mid-20th century when American
Kodak introduced
Kodachrome colour film.
Japanese hand-coloured photographs (circa 1860–1899) Though the hand-colouring of photographs was introduced in
Europe, the technique gained considerable popularity in
Japan, where the practice became a respected and refined art form beginning in the 1860s. It is possible that photographer Charles Parker and his artist partner William Parke Andrew were the first to produce such works in Japan, but the first to consistently employ hand-colouring in the country were the photographer
Felice Beato and his partner,
The Illustrated London News artist and colourist
Charles Wirgman. In Beato's studio the refined skills of
Japanese watercolourists and
woodblock printmakers were successfully applied to European photography, as evidenced in Beato's volume of hand-coloured portraits,
Native Types. Another notable early photographer in Japan to use hand-colouring was
Yokoyama Matsusaburō. Yokoyama had trained as a painter and lithographer as well as a photographer, and he took advantage of his extensive repertoire of skills and techniques to create what he called
shashin abura-e (写真油絵) or "photographic oil paintings", in which the paper support of a photograph was cut away and oil paints then applied to the remaining emulsion. Later practitioners of hand-colouring in Japan included the firm of
Stillfried & Andersen, which acquired Beato's studio in 1877 and hand-coloured many of his negatives in addition to its own. Austrian Baron Raimund von Stillfried und Ratenitz, trained Japanese photographer and colourist
Kusakabe Kimbei, and together they created hand-coloured images of Japanese daily life that were very popular as souvenirs. The increased demand for hand-coloured
landscape photography at the beginning of the 20th century is attributed to the work of
Wallace Nutting. Nutting, a New England minister, pursued hand-coloured landscape photography as a hobby until 1904, when he opened a professional studio. He spent the next 35 years creating hand-coloured photographs, and became the best-selling hand-coloured photographer of all time. Between 1915 and 1925 hand-coloured photographs were popular among the middle classes in the United States, Canada, Bermuda and the Bahamas as affordable and stylish wedding gifts, shower gifts, holiday gifts, friendship gifts, and vacation souvenirs. With the start of the
Great Depression in 1929, and the subsequent decrease in the numbers of the middle class, sales of hand-coloured photographs sharply diminished. In Poland, the
Monidło is an example of popular hand-coloured wedding photographs. Another hand-colour photographer, Luis Márquez (1899–1978), was the official photographer for and art adviser of the Mexican Pavilion at the 1939-40 World's Fair. In 1937 he presented Texas Governor
James V. Allred a collection of hand-coloured photographs. The
National Autonomous University of Mexico in Mexico City has an extensive Luis Márquez photographic archive, as does the
University of Houston in Texas. By the 1950s, the availability of colour film stopped the production of hand-coloured photographs. The upsurge in popularity of antiques and collectibles in the 1960s, however, increased interest in hand-coloured photographs. Since about 1970 there has been something of a revival of hand-colouring, as seen in the work of such artist-photographers as Robin Renee Hix, Elizabeth Lennard,
Jan Saudek,
Kathy Vargas, Rita Dibert and
Shae DeTar.
Robert Rauschenberg's and others' use of combined photographic and painting media in their art represents a precursor to this revival. In spite of the availability of high-quality
colour processes, hand-coloured photographs (often combined with
sepia toning) are still popular for aesthetic reasons and because the pigments used have great permanence. In many countries where colour film was rare or expensive, or where colour processing was unavailable, hand-colouring continued to be used and sometimes preferred into the 1980s. More recently,
digital image processing has been used – particularly in advertising – to recreate the appearance and effects of hand-colouring. Colourization is now available to the amateur photographer using image manipulation software such as
Adobe Photoshop or
Gimp. ==Materials and techniques==