Minos Posted June 16, 2008 Report Posted June 16, 2008 http://freeforumzone.leonardo.it/discus ... dd=7155592 That is super creepy, don't know what to think of it. Quote
Furyo Posted June 16, 2008 Report Posted June 16, 2008 Reenactment ftw. Those are some very accurate shots though Quote
Minos Posted June 16, 2008 Author Report Posted June 16, 2008 Reenactment ftw. Those are some very accurate shots though How would they fill the hangar with so many WWII planes?? Quote
Furyo Posted June 16, 2008 Report Posted June 16, 2008 Yeah I know, asking myself the same question, I just have a very hard time imagining photography technology was that elaborate back then. The first color photos were taken during the late 19th century, but the colors would have faded away and the precision of the optics was decades away from that kinda quality here. At the same time I can't see these pictures having been recolored from black and white ones, and if that's the case that's one hell of a good job. Quote
Bic-B@ll Posted June 16, 2008 Report Posted June 16, 2008 the national archives rescanned a buttload of negatives and put them on the internet. i have a bookmark on my other computer to their flickr account, there are thousands of these, they're quite amazing Quote
Steppenwolf Posted June 16, 2008 Report Posted June 16, 2008 Yeah I know, asking myself the same question, I just have a very hard time imagining photography technology was that elaborate back then. The first color photos were taken during the late 19th century, but the colors would have faded away and the precision of the optics was decades away from that kinda quality here. At the same time I can't see these pictures having been recolored from black and white ones, and if that's the case that's one hell of a good job. I think they are just photoshopped. Guy probably took a lot of pictures with the same plane on different positions and then mixed them. But i have to disagree with the optics. Before photo film was used (in smaller more compact cameras) and photos were taken on plates they could contain an incredible amount of details. When i worked in the archives of my home town i saw a shitload of large photos (in size from A4 to A3) from around 1890-1918 that just blew me away. It was really like a view back in time that felt more real then anything that i have seen before. Even the smallest details were crisp and clear. Off course these were in b&w tho. Quote
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