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  1. 17. Mai 2016 · On May 17, 1861, Scottish physicist Sir James Clerk Maxwell presented the very first colour photograph at the Royal Institution. The photograph showed a tartan ribbon and was made by Thomas Sutton according to the three-colour method proposed by Maxwell already in 1855.

  2. In 1861 the photographer Thomas Sutton, working with Maxwell, made three images of a tartan ribbon using red, green and blue, filters in front of the camera lens. The set of Maxwell's black-and-white slides are on permanent display in the museum at James Clerk Maxwell Foundation.

  3. In 1861 Scottish mathematical physicist James Clerk Maxwell produced the earliest color photograph, an image of a tartan ribbon, by having it photographed three times through red, blue, and yellow filters, then recombining the images into one color composite.

  4. 26. Juli 2022 · Als der schottische Physiker James Clerk Maxwell am 17. März 1861 in der Londoner Royal Institution während seines Vortrags über die Grundfarben ein farbiges Bild an die Wand des Auditoriums projizierte, hätte ohne seine Erläuterungen vermutlich niemand der Anwesenden zu sagen gewusst, was dort zu erkennen war – ein ...

  5. 19. Nov. 2017 · As it turns out, the man responsible for the first color photograph wasn’t particularly invested in photography at all. In the mid-1800s, Scottish scientist James Clerk Maxwell was far more concerned with his other, manifold interests—researching electromagnetism, determining the composition of Saturn’s rings, and formulating ...

  6. James Clerk Maxwell used these coloured disks during his research into colour vision, to establish how people see mixtures of colours.

  7. Between the time of the first pho­to­graph in 1826 by Joseph Nicéphore Niépce and 1861, pho­tog­ra­phy had advanced suf­fi­cient­ly that physi­cist James Clerk Maxwell —known for his “Maxwell’s Demon” thought experiment—produced the first col­or pho­to­graph that did not imme­di­ate­ly fade or require hand paint­ing (above).