I haven't had a people of the civil war post in a long time, which is a shame as the photographs are striking to look at and started me into this blog in the first place. Fortunately I got sucked into the Library of Congress's collection for a few hours today (when I should have been studying for a photo history exam, ironically), so I have rather a lot of material now to draw from! Expect more of this in the coming months.
Today's theme: hand-tinting. People were crazy about photography right away, but sad it didn't yet come in colour. So a market sprung up for the tinting of photographs with paints, aided by the fact that photography put many former painters of miniatures out of work. They tinted daguerreotypes (like this one), and when they moved on to tintypes, ambrotypes, and glass negative-paper photography, they tinted those even more. You almost always see some degree of tinting in ambrotypes and higher-end tintypes, especially the cheeks. Jewellery and buttons are also often painted with gold. (just glance through this post of civil war portraits!). However, it didn't always stop there. Parts of clothing, all the clothing, parts of the backdrop, tablecloths... all were potentially coloured. Sometimes this is a nice effect. Sometime it's.... not. (Though, granted, sometimes the different rates of deterioration in the imaging substance and the paints means the colour looks more drastic today than it did originally. Sometimes, though, it was just flat out badly done).
Portraits were done very widely in the civil war, as ambrotypes and tintypes, and there was a similar wide variety of tinting going on.
From the Library of Congress.
Portraits were done very widely in the civil war, as ambrotypes and tintypes, and there was a similar wide variety of tinting going on.
From the Library of Congress.
Library of Congress |
A Confederate captain. Ambrotype. Source
Library of Congress |
Union soldier with bayoneted musket. Ambrotype. Source
Library of Congress |
Unidentified Confederate soldier. Ambrotype. Source
Library of Congress |
Union soldier. Ambrotype. Source
Library of Congress |
Soldier in Confederate 2nd Lieutenant's uniform. Tintype. Source
Library of Congress |
Union soldier. Tintype. Source
Library of Congress |
Union soldier. Tintype. Source
Library of Congress |
Illinois soldier. Tintype. Source
Library of Congress |
Tinting to make you cringe. Two unidentified Union sailors. Tintype. Source
Library of Congress |
Union soldier. Tintype. Source
Library of Congress |
Mary Bannister, wife of Private George H. Bannister. Tintype. Source
Library of Congress |
Sergeant Robert Black and Private Herman Beckman. Tintype. Source
Library of Congress |
Soldier in Union artillery uniform. Ambrotype. Source
Library of Congress |
Solder in Union 2nd Lieutenant's uniform. Tintype. Source
Library of Congress |
Confederate soldier. Source
Library of Congress |
Private William B. Haberlin of the Pennsylvania Light Artillery. Source
1 comment:
How ordinary these people appear to be and, in so many photographs, how young. The other thing that strikes me is the hodgepodge of clothing in many of the "uniforms".
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