FedoraFan112390
Practically Family
- Messages
- 646
- Location
- Brooklyn, NY
The pictures date between 1949 and 1951. Based on the time period, what likely color pattern was it? Has anyone seen any jackets like it, and if so, where could I find one?
I have seen jackets like that one made by Aero Leather. I'm not sure if they still make the jacket, but the one they used to make would be very close to your pictures.
Good luck
The pictures date between 1949 and 1951. Based on the time period, what likely color pattern was it? Has anyone seen any jackets like it, and if so, where could I find one?
The pictures date between 1949 and 1951. Based on the time period, what likely color pattern was it? Has anyone seen any jackets like it, and if so, where could I find one?
"The pictures date between 1949 and 1951. Based on the time period, what likely color pattern was it? Has anyone seen any jackets like it, and if so, where could I find one?"
You can tell from the image what colour it is: the photograph is shot on orthochromatic film - not panorthochromatic film.
Orthochromatic film is blue sensitive and red insensitive: the tonality of red on orthochromatic film is not sensitised at the upper 590nm + wavelength and therefore red renders pale. In contrast, green darkens on orthochromatic film. You can use the subtractive method on the RGB colour spectrum and work out that the colour of the plaid is dominant green.
Are you sure? I thought it was the other way around. Orthochromatic film renders red darker to almost black and blue and green lighter. I don't think those photos are in Ortho, more like panchromatic as the tones look realistic. The faces are too pale. European skin tones are rendered darker like appearing heavily suntanned with Ortho film. That's why in old silent films, actors wore blue make up to prevent them looking dark skinned."The pictures date between 1949 and 1951. Based on the time period, what likely color pattern was it? Has anyone seen any jackets like it, and if so, where could I find one?"
You can tell from the image what colour it is: the photograph is shot on orthochromatic film - not panorthochromatic film.
Orthochromatic film is blue sensitive and red insensitive: the tonality of red on orthochromatic film is not sensitised at the upper 590nm + wavelength and therefore red renders pale. In contrast, green darkens on orthochromatic film. You can use the subtractive method on the RGB colour spectrum and work out that the colour of the plaid is dominant green.
"The pictures date between 1949 and 1951. Based on the time period, what likely color pattern was it? Has anyone seen any jackets like it, and if so, where could I find one?"
You can tell from the image what colour it is: the photograph is shot on orthochromatic film - not panorthochromatic film.
Orthochromatic film is blue sensitive and red insensitive: the tonality of red on orthochromatic film is not sensitised at the upper 590nm + wavelength and therefore red renders pale. In contrast, green darkens on orthochromatic film. You can use the subtractive method on the RGB colour spectrum and work out that the colour of the plaid is dominant green.
View attachment 62248
View attachment 62246
Here is Brando in On The Waterfront with his similar A2 style wool red jacket in colour and in panchromatic B&W. I would agree the OP's jacket is more likely shades of green with black but no way to tell for sure.
Are you sure? I thought it was the other way around. Orthochromatic film renders red darker to almost black and blue and green lighter. I don't think those photos are in Ortho, more like panchromatic as the tones look realistic. The faces are too pale. European skin tones are rendered darker like appearing heavily suntanned with Ortho film. That's why in old silent films, actors wore blue make up to prevent them looking dark skinned.
When Aero were still offering the Waterfront jacket they said in their blurb that the original was red and they were still trying to source the correct colour wool and hoped to offer it in the future. As to the images of the real Brando jacket in the public domain, the few colour photos of it I have seen are red. They could all be a product of colourisation or maybe not.Hasn't that Brando photo been colourised? I'm sure the original was green.
The pictures date between 1949 and 1951. Based on the time period, what likely color pattern was it? Has anyone seen any jackets like it, and if so, where could I find one?