Karl K
08-25-2008, 07:56 PM
These are some of the earliest 35mm Kodachrome images, which were recently scanned and not digitally enhanced. Enjoy!
www.ccbirding.com/p%26b/temp/WWII_Photos
www.ccbirding.com/p%26b/temp/WWII_Photos
| View Full Version : Kodachrome: Images made before WWII Pages :
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2 Karl K 08-25-2008, 07:56 PM These are some of the earliest 35mm Kodachrome images, which were recently scanned and not digitally enhanced. Enjoy! www.ccbirding.com/p%26b/temp/WWII_Photos bobwysiwyg 08-25-2008, 08:18 PM Great, thanks for posting. I particularly like the rural store shot. AutumnJazz 08-25-2008, 08:32 PM Amazing, they look like they were taking yesterday. How surreal. Whiteymorange 08-25-2008, 08:37 PM Great link! Thanks. PKM-25 08-25-2008, 08:49 PM I love these images, even went out to Pie Town and photographed a man who appeared in one the old shots as a kid. But we need to be shooting these kinds of images now. This film should not pass on as a bunch of snaps looking like lens tests, pictures of cats and or rose bushes. The Kodachrome I am shooting now is incredibly vibrant and rich, just like the good old days...There will be time to truly reminisce when the film is actually gone. Kodachrome 25, Leica MP-3, 50mm 1.4 Summilux aspheric, 2008. Jeff Kubach 08-25-2008, 08:51 PM Awesome images. Just can't beat Kodachrome! A blast from the past. Jeff chop61 08-25-2008, 08:59 PM Like polished jewels! As beautiful as the day the box of slides was opened and the shooter held one up to the light for a first look. thanks, this made my day. athanasius80 08-26-2008, 02:09 AM That was powerful. Thanks benjiboy 08-26-2008, 05:31 AM Thanks Karl, a wonderful look of an America that has gone forever, we forget that life in those days went on in colour , I notice some of the slides have the round corners that the Kodachrome cardboard mounts had, I had all but forgotten about these. p3200TMZ 08-26-2008, 07:05 AM I just ordered 24 rolls of Kodachrome 64. I know I have to ship it back to the US for processing, but all the time and hassle will be worth it when I open one of the boxes of slides. I has been a long time since I have seen Kodachrome color, but much longer. I guess compared to $5 a roll in 1938, which was a half a weeks wages, Kodachrome is a bargain. The equivalent today would be a price of about $250 per roll. I would love to get my hands on some Kodachrome 25, but I guess those days are over... JHannon 08-26-2008, 08:01 AM Great photos! Thanks for the link Karl. allen_a_george 08-26-2008, 08:07 AM It was great to see those photos. I really do love the Kodachrome colors, and the color photos definitely change my mental image of the 1930s. Thanks for posting the link! nworth 08-26-2008, 10:46 AM Excellent link. Interesting variability to the technical quality of the images, but the social content is what is important. I noticed the car photographed near the Golden Gate at Fort Cronkite. In another year that area would be closed to the public and would remain closed until the late 50s. The text mentions the attempts of the New Deal to improve the conditions for sharecroppers and braceros, but nothing much really happened until the late 60s. Heinz_Anderle 08-26-2008, 03:03 PM It is noteworthy that the first dedicated photo book with color illustrations printed from mostly Kodachrome slides, as well as the first technical textbook on color photography, were both published in Germany (K. P. Karfeld (ed.): Das farbige Leica-Buch, engl. version: The Leica book in color, with photographs by Anton Baumann, and H. A. Kluge: Foto in Farben, both 1938). The dancers in Oklahoma appear to have been photographed on the very first generation of Kodachrome (1936 - 1938), which was processed using "controlled diffusion" and suffered from fading into purple. The improved version with selective post-exposure for reversal processing (to which the Austrian pioneer Dr. Karl Schinzel may have contributed) has remained stable. The grain is very fine, as I have noticed on scanning slides from 1959. pentaxuser 08-26-2008, 06:40 PM Thanks Karl. A history lesson with pictures that I might not have ever seen even if I had spent a lot of money on books. pentaxuser iamzip 08-26-2008, 11:25 PM Incredible. Many of those images look absolutely amazing. I just discovered slide film this year - before then, I simply thought it was used for slides. Some trouble getting the colors right while scanning has discouraged me, but I think I really need to learn how to get it right, and shoot some Kodachrome before it is too late. Frank Szabo 08-27-2008, 01:52 AM Thanks so much for posting those photos. The scary part is the majority of those in the photos probably wouldn't recognize the country they helped to build due to the direction it's taken. bluedog 08-27-2008, 02:32 AM Thanks for the link Karl. Love the Kodachrome colors. Thanasis 08-27-2008, 06:13 AM Nice. Thanks for the link. I notice some of these appeared on shorpy.com as well with a bit more saturation. benjiboy 08-27-2008, 07:26 AM To me the most amazing thing about Kodachrome is it was invented by two men Leopold Godowski, and Leopold Mannes, who were not scientists, or photo chemists, but professional classical musicians with an interest in photo chemistry since high school who before being sponsored by Kodak, did much of the R&D work in hotel bedrooms ! accozzaglia 08-27-2008, 03:14 PM The locomotive assembly shot, clearly 4x5 Kodachrome, just leaves me breathless. I'd seen a few of these before, like the Pie Town shots, but the new ones here just continue to make me love Kodachrome even more. There's still nothing else like it. Edwardv 08-27-2008, 07:38 PM Thanks for sharing. I sure do miss Kodachrome 120. Louis Nargi 08-27-2008, 11:26 PM thanks for sharing goldie 08-27-2008, 11:46 PM The locomotive assembly shot, clearly 4x5 Kodachrome, just leaves me breathless. Agree - that shot is a standout. Thanks to the original poster for the link. iamzip 08-28-2008, 12:00 AM To me the most amazing thing about Kodachrome is it was invented by two men Leopold Godowski, and Leopold Mannes, who were not scientists, or photo chemists, but professional classical musicians with an interest in photo chemistry since high school who before being sponsored by Kodak, did much of the R&D work in hotel bedrooms ! I'd like to hear that story, being a musician myself... |