The Earliest Color Photos of Ireland Taken by Two Frenchwomen

This post was originally published on this site

These stunning pictures, taken by Marguerite Mespoulet and Madeleine Mignon-Alba during their 2-month-long trip to Ireland in 1913, are believed to be the first color photos of Ireland ever taken.

Galway, 1 May 1913.

The pair was part of a worldwide project titled “The Archives of the Planet.” French banker and philanthropist Albert Kahn created the project to compose a “kind of photographic inventory of the surface of the earth as it was occupied and organized by Man at the beginning of the 20th century.” His project captured some of the first color photographs taken in Ireland, the United States, Norway, Vietnam, and Brazil.
Black and white photography had been around for decades, but color photography was cutting-edge technology at the beginning of the twentieth century. The women, who were novice photographers, used this new technology developed by French inventors called autochrome color plates.

Main Ní Tuathail, a 14-year-old girl from Claddagh wearing a traditional Claddagh dress, Galway, 26 May 1913.

Through the lenses of their Autochrome Lumière cameras, these adventurer intellectuals documented priceless moments of remote villages, Irish rural settlements, lives of locals adhering to traditional Gaelic values, ancient Celtic monuments, prominent Christian sites, green landscapes, cemeteries, street settings from Galway city and much more.
 Take a trip back in time to 1910s Ireland through these 25 stunning photographs:

Traditional Irish knitwear, An Spidéal, Galway, 1 May 1913.

Mother and child outside a dwelling, Claddagh, Galway, 25 May 1913.

Selling fish at the port of Galway, 26 May 1913.

See more »

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*