bobfells wrote:You ask a fair question. I'll answer it this way- b/w is unnatural. We don't see in b/w and much of the history of b/w photography is based on expediency - color was too complex and expensive.
Good point, but we still see and imagine the past we haven't experienced in b/w because that's all that been available. A lot of us still aren't used to considering the past as a world of color, and that affects a lot of our decisions when colorizing photographs. We act like we've been kept in the dark for decades, and now that we've been released into the sunlight, it hurts our eyes. So we convert the blah b/w into blah color, and we're right back where we started. Or we try to color the past with the hues of the present, an equally egregious mistake.
To use another contemporary example, one of my friends inherited a 1924 Chrysler roadster from her father, and it has one of the wildest original paint jobs ever -- light green over ivory. Looks really sporty, but if someone today colorized a picture of a 1924 Chrysler roadster, would they choose those same colors? I'll bet they wouldn't, and that's why I won't stop encouraging all you colorizers out there to DO YOUR HOMEWORK -- study old color images and learn the values.
Bob, you get points from me because you're not only trying to vary the color palette for these old photos, you're also starting to make some historically informed color choices (e.g., the Jolson portrait from MAMMY). I saw your latest post at the Arliss Archives (I'm a subscriber, by the way), and I like the "lobby card" look of the photos you colorized.
bobfells wrote:But much of b/w photography is utilitarian and not artistic at all. In other words, there's a lot of bla in black and white.
Another point taken, but the irony here is that the "utilitarian" flat-lighted b/w photos are often the poorest choices for colorizing. As Steve R mentioned, you need a sharp picture with good contrast, or otherwise, you're dead in the water.
bobfells wrote:We see in color so I rather debate why I gave Al Jolson a navy blue sweater instead of beige than leave a very bland looking b/w photo alone.
I went through some magazines from the 1929-30 period from when that picture was probably taken, and found that you could probably get away with a shade of pale blue, pale yellow, or oatmeal for Jolson's sweater. Note that it's a lighter shade than Berlin's sweater, so the first two choices are probably better.
bobfells wrote:I rather admit that I went overboard in my choice of a color or its intensity. That, my friend, is creativity.
If you really want to split hairs, that's interpretation, not creativity. A playwright creates, an actor interprets. God creates, a painter interprets (OK, I'd better stop there).