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Archive 2014 · Portraits of the Civil War

  
 
mike717
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p.2 #1 · Portraits of the Civil War


Great series and wonderful processing, well done!

Mike



Sep 01, 2014 at 03:37 PM
unclechuck
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p.2 #2 · Portraits of the Civil War


Exceptional. Individual character casting is magnificent. Reflects historically accurate astute powers of observation and the technical skill to reproduce that reality.

Now about those "Sunglasses"

"Around the year 1752, eyeglass designer James Ayscough introduced his spectacles with double-hinged side pieces. The lenses were made of tinted glass as well as clear. Ayscough felt that white glass created an offensive glaring light, that was bad to the eyes. He advised the use of green and blue glasses. Ayscough glasses were the first sunglass like eyeglasses, but they were not made to shield the eyes from the sun, they corrected for vision problems."

I purchased a gold wire framed Civil War pair in Vermont in the mid-70's; the gold is exquisitely detailed and very fine (thin). Every Civil War collector who has seen them has tried to buy them and none remarked the blue cast in the glass.

Here's an image of a pair similar to mine although the blue is much weaker, more a tint than a color, and the frames are bright gold not dark. Likely the frames were made by a jeweler as they have a goldsmith mark under the nose bridge.

So while the glasses in your images may or may not be legit the colored glass could be.



Sep 01, 2014 at 06:50 PM
CarlG
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p.2 #3 · Portraits of the Civil War


Very, very well executed - they feel so authentic!


Sep 01, 2014 at 10:09 PM
cambyses
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p.2 #4 · Portraits of the Civil War


Thank you so much Mike, Chuck, and Carl for your comments. Appreciate it. Glad you liked the pictures.

Uncle Chuck -- very interesting info on civil war era sunglasses. Thx for sharing.



Sep 02, 2014 at 12:38 AM
dmacmillan
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p.2 #5 · Portraits of the Civil War


This is a very nice series. On #2 I suggest you clone out the barricade and the people reflected in the sunglasses.


Sep 02, 2014 at 10:24 AM
cambyses
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p.2 #6 · Portraits of the Civil War


dmacmillan wrote:
This is a very nice series. On #2 I suggest you clone out the barricade and the people reflected in the sunglasses.


Thanks a lot for the comment. Certainly a good point. I will do that.



Sep 04, 2014 at 06:08 PM
Big Appa
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p.2 #7 · Portraits of the Civil War


Great goodness, these are awesome!
I won't tell anyone, but..where do you keep your time machine?

Ed



Sep 04, 2014 at 06:34 PM
Cmmfl
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p.2 #8 · Portraits of the Civil War


I love them all. Everyone is so stoic and they look very tired.....as they probably were during the Civil War. Really nice!!


Sep 04, 2014 at 09:52 PM
Prettym1k3
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p.2 #9 · Portraits of the Civil War


Great PP. Looks almost like tintypes.

If you had a chance to severely dodge and burn, and add some "mistakes" to the images around the edges, these would be splendid.



Sep 05, 2014 at 11:42 AM
glennh56
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p.2 #10 · Portraits of the Civil War


This series is Excellent!


Sep 05, 2014 at 03:28 PM
bcguy
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p.2 #11 · Portraits of the Civil War


You've done really well with these. I think photographing an event like this would be a real hoot! Thanks very much for sharing.


Sep 09, 2014 at 12:05 AM
Truebeam
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p.2 #12 · Portraits of the Civil War


What a great set! Excellent initial capture and PP work! Love all of them. My fav is #8. I do all my pp work with Nik (minimum LR). Silver Efex Pro is one of my favorite tools! Thanks for sharing.

Lily



Sep 09, 2014 at 03:18 AM
Arka
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p.2 #13 · Portraits of the Civil War


Fun series and interesting processing, though the tightness of the focus in the image (aside from a few anachronisms here and there) betray the time period. That said, you did a nice job here with everything, but I really really don't like the selective desaturation on the cannon shot. I'd love to see that in the same B&W processing.


Sep 09, 2014 at 04:24 AM
Micky Bill
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p.2 #14 · Portraits of the Civil War


Nice work, not many people remember the bloody battle of Huntington Beach


Sep 09, 2014 at 11:35 AM
rockant
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p.2 #15 · Portraits of the Civil War


unclechuck wrote:
Exceptional. Individual character casting is magnificent. Reflects historically accurate astute powers of observation and the technical skill to reproduce that reality.

Now about those "Sunglasses"

"Around the year 1752, eyeglass designer James Ayscough introduced his spectacles with double-hinged side pieces. The lenses were made of tinted glass as well as clear. Ayscough felt that white glass created an offensive glaring light, that was bad to the eyes. He advised the use of green and blue glasses. Ayscough glasses were the first sunglass like eyeglasses, but they were not made to shield the eyes from the sun, they corrected for vision problems."

I purchased a gold wire framed Civil War pair in Vermont in the mid-70's; the gold is exquisitely detailed and very fine (thin). Every Civil War collector who has seen them has tried to buy them and none remarked the blue cast in the glass.

Here's an image of a pair similar to mine although the blue is much weaker, more a tint than a color, and the frames are bright gold not dark. Likely the frames were made by a jeweler as they have a goldsmith mark under the nose bridge.

So while the glasses in your images may or may not be legit the colored glass could be.
...Show more


And here is the main reason people had tinted glasses:

"Glasses tinted with yellow-amber and brown were also a commonly-prescribed item for people with syphilis in the 19th and early 20th century because one of the symptoms of the disease was sensitivity to light."

That might make them more common amongst the military...

Reguardless, a wonderful set of images.




Sep 11, 2014 at 05:20 PM
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