File:F E Ives inserting Kromogram uncropped.jpg

F_E_Ives_inserting_Kromogram_uncropped.jpg(696 × 515 pixels, file size: 76 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

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Description
English: Frederic Eugene Ives (1856-1937) inserting a Kromogram into his Kromskop, circa 1899. The Ives Kromskop (pronounced "chrome-scope" and known generically as a chromoscope or photochromoscope) was a device used to view Kromograms, specially mounted sets of three black-and-white photographs taken through red, green and blue filters. It used corresponding colored glass filters to appropriately illuminate each photograph and transparent reflectors to visually combine them into a single full-color image. A monoscopic (2-D) "Junior Kromskop" is shown. The more common stereoscopic (3-D) model was standard.
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International Clinics, Volume II, Tenth

Series (1900), Figure 2, facing page 3
Author Unknown authorUnknown author

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current01:29, 9 October 2012Thumbnail for version as of 01:29, 9 October 2012696 × 515 (76 KB)AVarchaeologist (talk | contribs)User created page with UploadWizard

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