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SUMMARY:2.2. Types of Photography
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260404T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260404T200000
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DESCRIPTION: Firstly, we must distinguish between:

Coloured or monochromatic;
Positive or negative;
Photographic or photomechanical processes.

Distinguishing between monochromatic and coloured photographs is usually quite obvious. Monochromatic prints have the same tone, with different densities across the image; whereas in coloured prints, various colours are in harmony with the shapes represented.
However, there are some monochromatic prints that have been coloured by brush or pencil, and so they can be confused with colour photography. It is therefore important to find out whether the print was painted or not, by looking for visible traces of a brush or pencil or by checking for a monochromatic image behind the colour. Painted prints must be considered monochromatic.
\Other photographs use pigmentation processes (like bromoil) where colour is applied in a more or less rude manner, manually, with a brush or by overlapping several layers of paint of different colours. We may observe that the...

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