Harold A. Taylor :: [California poppies and purple flowers], glass negative, Autochrome. | src California Revealed (DETAIL)Harold A. Taylor :: [California poppies and purple flowers], glass negative, Autochrome. | src California Revealed · Harold Taylor CollectionHarold A. Taylor :: [California poppies and purple flowers], glass negative, Autochrome. | src California Revealed (DETAIL)
Photo on a small glass panel. Color. Photo of orange California poppies with additional purple flowers throughout the upper left corner of the background. Additional Description: Assumed to be an original lantern slide / autochrome by Harold A. Taylor, California photographer and resident of Coronado for many years.
Harold A. Taylor was born in the United Kingdom in 1878. In 1896, he immigrated to California, where he photographed Yosemite and other natural scenes in the state. He is credited by some as developing a method of colorizing photographs. In 1912, Taylor moved to Coronado, CA where he established the Coronado Floral Association and continued his photography business. He died in 1960 in El Cajon, CA.
Gif from a time-lapse animation of flowers and plants : Filmwerken Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen [NL, 1932]
Time lapse animation of flowers and plants. Fragment from Filmwerken Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen [NL, J.C. Mol, Multifilm (Haarlem), 1932]Capture from a time-lapse animation of flowers and plants : Filmwerken Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen [Mol, 1932]Gif from a time-lapse animation of flowers and plants : Filmwerken Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen [Mol, 1932]
Time lapse animation of flowers and plants. Fragment from Filmwerken Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen [NL, J.C. Mol, Multifilm (Haarlem), 1932]
Time lapse animation of flowers and plants. Fragment from Filmwerken Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen [NL, J.C. Mol, Multifilm (Haarlem), 1932]
Time lapse animation of flowers and plants. Fragment from Filmwerken Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen [NL, J.C. Mol, Multifilm (Haarlem), 1932]
All fragments are extracted from an educational Dutch film : Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen (1932) Director: J.C. Mol | Production Country: Netherlands | Year: 1932 | Production Company: Multifilm (Haarlem) | Film from the collection of EYE (Amsterdam)
Accelerated frame-by-frame shots (time-lapse, or “Zeitraffer”) of budding flowers and moving plants and mushrooms. This is part of the episodic film “WONDERS OF NATURE”, which is also shown in separate parts.
In case you are interested, here we add the links to related films:
Uit het rijk der kristallen [From the realm of crystals (J.C. Mol; 1927)] : in website, on their youtube channel (the advantage of the youtube version is that it is divided in chapters by chemical product. There are different versions of Uit het rijk der kristallen: the original silent film was given a soundtrack in the 1930s and is longer.
Uit het rijk der kristallen is one of the scientific films made by Mol. Several versions of this film exist. In the film, the crystallization processes of various chemicals are shown and there is a colour version of the film which was made using Dufay colour.
Arnold Genthe :: Helen MacGowan Cooke picking California Golden poppies in a field, between 1906 and 1911. Autochrome. (*) | src Library of CongressArnold Genthe :: Helen MacGowan Cooke picking California Golden poppies in a field, between 1906 and 1911. Autochrome. (*) | src Library of CongressArnold Genthe :: Helen MacGowan Cooke at the beach in Carmel, California, between 1906 and 1911. Autochrome. (*) | src Library of CongressArnold Genthe :: Helen MacGowan Cooke at the beach in Carmel, California, between 1906 and 1911. Autochrome. (*) | src Library of CongressArnold Genthe :: Helen MacGowan Cooke picking California Golden poppies in a field, between 1906 and 1911. Autochrome [alternative rendition of Autochrome on top] (*) | src Library of Congress
(*) please note: the images had been edited from the original scans available at the link above in the Library of Congress to enhance its color and definition.