User Tools

Site Tools


week_9_questions_comments-325_25

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revision
Previous revision
week_9_questions_comments-325_25 [2025/10/23 10:30] – [Geoffrey Bennett, “Colour Comes to All,” The Story of Popular Photography] 76.78.172.119week_9_questions_comments-325_25 [2025/10/23 11:08] (current) – [Geoffrey Bennett, “Colour Comes to All,” The Story of Popular Photography] 108.44.149.185
Line 28: Line 28:
  
 What I found interesting about this chapter was near the beginning, it mentioned how color photography through color separation had begun as far back as 1861, yet like many other inventions... by a fluke.  It also mentioned other uses of the light of the RGB style, which I've seen still used in art programs today, and being used for Cathode Ray Tube TV's, which needed a lead lined glass to protect the viewer from the rays generated.  Color in films has also been very special to people, including the color used for the film about Midway during the war.  - David Y. What I found interesting about this chapter was near the beginning, it mentioned how color photography through color separation had begun as far back as 1861, yet like many other inventions... by a fluke.  It also mentioned other uses of the light of the RGB style, which I've seen still used in art programs today, and being used for Cathode Ray Tube TV's, which needed a lead lined glass to protect the viewer from the rays generated.  Color in films has also been very special to people, including the color used for the film about Midway during the war.  - David Y.
 +
 +Reading Geoffrey Bennett’s “Colour Comes to All” resonated deeply with me because photography has always been part of my own family’s story. I grew up surrounded by cameras, film reels, and light meters the smell of developer fluid was as familiar as morning coffee. Being part of camera clubs and even teaching slide photography gave me an appreciation for how photography blends both technical precision and artistic vision. In many ways, that experience mirrors what Bennett describes: the democratization of photography through evolving technology. Just as early photographers labored to bring color to life through experimentation and hand-coloring, my generation witnessed another kind of transformation from slides and darkrooms to digital sensors and instant image sharing. The accessibility Bennett celebrated in the 1970s has only accelerated, making the art once practiced by specialists something nearly everyone now holds in their pocket. What I find most compelling is Bennett’s idea of photography as a “folk art of the masses.” My own teaching and club experiences reflect that spirit a community built around shared curiosity, creativity, and the joy of capturing the world in color. His essay doesn’t just chart the rise of color photography; it reminds me how every phase of that history connects to real people, families, and generations who found meaning through the lens. - Todd H.
 ==== Christine Kleinegger – “Out of the Barns and into the Kitchens: Transformations in Farm Women’s Work in the First Half of the Twentieth Century.” ==== ==== Christine Kleinegger – “Out of the Barns and into the Kitchens: Transformations in Farm Women’s Work in the First Half of the Twentieth Century.” ====
  
week_9_questions_comments-325_25.1761215412.txt.gz · Last modified: by 76.78.172.119