• [object Object]@lemmy.world
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      16 days ago

      Reverse image search shows some different attempts at colorization, and also black-and-white originals that have much less contrast.

      Gotta say, this colorization fooled me at first, because it’s exactly how old buildings in SPb look now.

      P.S. The “color by Klimbim” signature in the corner should’ve probably been the biggest hint.

      • PugJesus@piefed.socialOPM
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        15 days ago

        P.S. The “color by Klimbim” signature in the corner should’ve probably been the biggest hint.

        lmao, I completely missed that

      • Beacon@fedia.io
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        16 days ago

        To me it’s obviously screaming colorized.

        The colors are way too uniform. All the blue scarves are exactly the same blue, all the skin tones are exactly the same, all the individual buildings have a color that’s exactly uniform from corner to corner, etc.

        And things like the ice are completely missing any color at all (except for maybe an overall blueish tint they added to the dark areas) but in real life everything has color. Objects that you might think are just monochrome black-gray-white actually have a lot of different colors in them. So when a section of a picture looks like a black n white photo instead of a color photo it immediately pops out to me.

        Plus, the colors of all the different objects disagree on the type of light hitting them. Like for the black ice to have a significant blueish tint means the lighting of that day wouldn’t create a pinkish skin tone.

        And there’s no atmospheric effects in the distance of colors. Like the column closest to the camera is the same color as the most distant column, but in reality colors fade as they go further into the distance even at the scale in this photo.

        This concludes my procrastination ted talk.

    • joby
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      15 days ago

      So it seems. We do have a ton of color photos from the era from This guy (Sergey Prokudin-Gorskii).

      He took three b&w photos through filters at the same time, then would project them through filters to get the color.