Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Photography
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. News

Photographer colorizes 130-year-old selfie of never-before-seen ancestor

Add as a preferred source on Google

French photographer Mathieu Stern got a once-in-a-lifetime gift from his ancestor earlier this year. While looking around an old house owned by his family, Stern discovered a discarded box of mostly broken photography equipment, but to his surprise, inside the box, he found three glass plate negatives of one of his mysterious ancestors.

Two of the plates were in bad shape and unusable, but one contained a self-portrait of his long-forgotten relative, whom he calls Mr. Albert. Stern, knowing how negative images work, took an image of the glass plate with his modern digital camera, brought the image into his computer, and after a couple tweaks — boom — a fully digital, black-and-white image of an ancestor no one has seen in over 100 years.

Recommended Videos

But Stern didn’t stop there. He wanted to get a better feel for what the scene may have looked like at the time the image was taken. He had heard about how computer vision algorithms could analyze black-and-white images to give a best guess as to what the colors in the image actually were. Stern notes that it works best with moderns digital black and white images, but that he wanted to see how it did with his 130-year-old image.

The resulting image was not pretty at all. But it served its purpose, giving Stern the guide he needed to open Photoshop and utilize his skills as a photographer to colorize the image. After using every Photoshop trick he could think of, he ended up with a final image that he thinks represents what the true colors of the scene might have been. The image was so good, in fact, that his family did not believe him at first until he showed them the glass plate.

Anthony Thurston
Anthony is an internationally published photographer based in the beautiful Pacific Northwest. Specializing primarily in…
Sony is halting sales of memory cards and you have AI to blame for it
Global memory shortages driven by AI demand are now hitting cameras and storage cards.
Sony SD Card

Sony has hit pause on a major part of its storage business, and not-so-surprisingly, AI is one of the reasons behind it. The company has officially announced that it is temporarily suspending orders for most of its CFexpress and SD memory cards, citing a global shortage of semiconductor memory.

The suspension applies to both retailers and direct customers, and there’s currently no clear timeline for when sales will resume. This isn’t just a minor supply hiccup. Instead, it’s a sign of a much bigger problem brewing across the tech industry.

Read more
4K stabilized footage, 10km transmission range, and 93 minutes of flight for $309: the DJI Mini 4K is on sale
DJI Mini 4K Fly More Combo drops to $309 (31% off): 4K gimbal camera, 3 batteries, 93-min flight time.
DJI Mini 4K Fly More Combo deal

The DJI Mini 4K Fly More Combo is down to $309 at Amazon, a $140 saving off its $449 list price. For that you're getting a sub-249-gram drone with a 4K 3-axis gimbal camera, 10km video transmission range, and three batteries in the box for up to 93 minutes of total flight time. As entry points into serious aerial photography go, this is one of the more complete packages at this price.

get the deal

Read more
Want cinematic footage without a full camera rig? This 8K 360 drone bundle is $300 off
The Antigravity A1 Infinity Bundle drops to $1,699, which is a meaningful discount for an 8K 360 setup
Antigravity A1 8K 360 drone deal

Most drone deals are about shaving a little off a standard flying camera. This one is aimed at a different kind of buyer: someone who wants dramatic, creative angles and is willing to pay for a more ambitious capture style. The Antigravity A1 8K 360 Remote Control Drone (Infinity Bundle) is $1,699.00, saving you $300 off the $1,999.00 compared value. It’s still a premium purchase, but the discount is big enough to matter if you’ve been waiting for a better entry point.

get the deal

Read more