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i am amazed that this was the picture of the day on November 16, 2006 since it is only October 25, 2006. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Emit flesti (talk • contribs) .
As the original says, this wasn't taken as an actual color photograph. Instead, it was three monochrome images, one each of red, green, and blue. The Library of Congress recently redid several of the photographer's pictures by digitizing and combining the separate images to make one high quality color image. -- kenb215talk05:00, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
There is no way a I believe this to be a hundred year old photo. This looks like the sort of guy in some central-Asian city which dresses up for the tourists so they can have a cool souvenir pic. The color is amazing, and if it truly were 3 overlapping RGB images, then there wold be either imperfect superposition (due to the movement of the subject between one color shot and the next, oooooor, a 3D effect, like un red-blue 3D images, in which each camera for each color, being placed one next to the other, will give slightly diferent points of view. --Cuyaya15:00, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
The photo was taken by one camera, not three. Prokudin-Gorskii developed a camera that shot the red, green, and blue images in quick succession -- it's not like he manually changed the filters himself before each exposure. You are right, however, that if there was any movement in between each exposure, you'd have some weird effect, and you can see that in the water om Image:Prokudin-Gorskii-07.jpg (people can hold still, but the water is constantly moving). howcheng {chat}18:10, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
Um, yes way
I'm sorry, but I really have to laugh at some of the comments here. Try to understand that, though these photos may be new to you, they're actually world famous, and there is no chance they are faked anymore than there's a chance the Mona Lisa is a fake. If you're skeptical, have a look, e.g., at this image. This is a slightly better illustration than howcheng's example above. In the middle left of the picture, two men are strolling along the railing. Note that they show up as a series of blue, red, and green "ghosts". This is an artifact of the Prokudin-Gorskii color technique, one that would not crop up in a modern color photo.--129.46.237.2420:30, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
No need for sarcasm. This image perfectly shows the effects I mentioned before. Nonetheless, the picture of the fat bearded dude is remakable. Prokudin must've injected him with some sort of sedative for him to remain so still. Color overlaps are un-noticeable.--Cuyaya13:38, 17 November 2006 (UTC)
The image cited above as an example of the Prokudin-Gorskii technique verifies that the photo in question is indeed a forgery, in my view. I say this on the grounds that it is impossible for a person to remain absolutely still. Whereas the example image has the expected "ghosts," Mohammed Alim Khan's picture contains no trace of them. If indeed this is a world famous picture, then it is a world famous forgery as well. I expect that some enterprising investigator will eventually demonstrate this conclusively. Xerxesnine16:45, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
Alright, after looking at the other Prokudin-Gorskii pictures I am a bit more convinced. This particular picture of Khan just happens to have a "cheesy" look about it. Something about its particular sharpness and flamboyant colors makes it coincidentally resemble a modern-day prank. Xerxesnine17:08, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
Still not conviced. Even a coloured picture wouldn't look this real.