In recent times there is a growing trend to ‘colourise’ (or
colorize) monochromatic images. Some claim that this ‘process’ is recovering
lost information.
I would like these so- called ‘Photoshop artists’ – who say
that they are using computer software to determine the colour values of a mono
print to try a little experiment.
The image below is made up of three colours, separated by two black
stripes. I reduced the colours to monochromatic values – now please tell me the
actual colours. (the answer is at the end of this article).
At best – and I’m being charitable here – the so- called
‘Photoshop artist’ is using known colours from external sources to apply those
colour values to the mono image – A mono image of a London Transport
double-decker bus in a busy London street taken in the 1960s is likely to be
something approaching post office red. Likewise a picture of a Court Line
Lockheed L-1011 TriStar taxiing past the Vauxhall car-park at Luton is either
three shades of yellow/orange or three shades of pink – and if you know the
registration of the aircraft in the picture, you know which, as there was only
two aircraft painted in these colours.
London Transport Routemaster bus - right?
Post office red - right?
But how do you actually KNOW the colours of things in the
background? Grass is grass, so there is a fair chance it’s green, but wait –
sunburnt grass is often brown – quite a difference there!
Lets go back to that London bus – what’s the colours of the
cars alongside it? What’s the
colours of the clothes the people are wearing? What is the colours of the goods
in the shop windows – or the actual colours of the shop fronts for that matter?
The same applies to the cars in the car-park at Luton. Do we actually KNOW?
wrong!
So, it’s clear that experience, knowledge and research plays
a huge part in determining the colours used. But how many ‘Photoshop artists’
actually spend the time and effort in doing that – preferring instead to make a
best guess and coming up with something that ‘looks good’.
Now there is nothing wrong with that if the resulting image
is just for their own pleasure – but given the nature of the internet, images
do not often stay ‘private’ – people are proud of their work and like to show
it off, therefore it’s not long before these images are in the public domain in
places like Facebook – the next thing you know is that they are copied, and
instead of stating, ‘….hey folks, look what I have colourised’. They resurface
as ‘colour photo of XXX discovered’ with people claiming that they are 100%
authentic!
This is what I mean by faking history – I know I’m screaming
into the wind, and no matter what I say I’m not going to stop it – but I still
think it’s wrong – and in terms of future historians, dangerously wrong. Oh…
and the colours at the start of this?.... R G B!
1 comment:
You have an exceedingly valid position and I support your viee 100%. Leave things alone. If it's monochrome it should stay that way if it's in the public sector. Thank you for taking the time to post this intelligent argument.
Post a Comment