흑백을 컬러로 만든 것이 아닌 처음으로 공개되는 1차 세계 대전 컬러 사진 The Great War pictures that are NOT colourised: Incredible photographs of World War I taken by some of the first colour cameras

 

The Great War pictures that are NOT colourised: Incredible photographs of World War I taken by some of the first colour cameras



Stunning pictures show French soldiers reading newspapers and pausing for lunch in ruined towns and cities

Weapons and machinery are seen in incredible detail including an airman with a British Sopwith fighter plane

The pictures also show a young child playing with a doll and soldiers clearing rubble after artillery attacks 


흑백을 컬러로 만든 것이 아닌 처음으로 공개되는 1차 세계 대전 컬러 사진

더 많은 사진을 보려면 아래 링크를 클릭!


By Tim Stickings For Mailonline

PUBLISHED: 12:25 BST, 1 June 2018 | UPDATED: 16:02 BST, 1 June 2018




Incredible colour photographs have shone new light on life among the ruins of World War I. 


The stunning pictures show French soldiers reading newspapers, pausing for lunch in ruined towns and cities and clearing the rubble after devastating German artillery raids.


 

Some of the weapons and machinery of the war can also be seen in extraordinary detail, including a British Sopwith fighter plane and 75mm guns used by French artillery. 




The world's first colour photograph was taken in 1861, but the use of colour film did not become widespread until well after the end of the First World War.  


The pictures also reveal the human side of the war, as one soldier is shaved by a barber in a French military encampment and another picture shows a girl playing with her doll in the ruins of Reims.  


 

A little girl plays with her doll next to two guns and a knapsack, in the city of Reims in northern France in 1917. Between April and May of this year, British and French troops fought the Battle of the Hills to the east of the city, between Prunay and Aubérive, in an attempt to break through German lines on the Aisne front and push the Germans back across modern-day Belgium toward their own borders. Though the attack achieved several important goals, it was ultimately unsuccessful


Read more: 


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5794893/The-Great-War-colour-Incredible-photographs-World-War-I.html#ixzz5HBe68Bxs 

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