Otto Pfenninger

Summary

Otto Pfenninger (5 April 1855 – 20 March 1929)[1] was a founding member of the Swiss Photographers Association (1886) and a pioneer of colour photography. He moved to Brighton, England where he developed his career as a photographer.

Otto Pfenninger
Born(1855-04-05)5 April 1855
Died20 March 1929(1929-03-20) (aged 73)
Mitcham, Surrey, England
NationalitySwiss
Known forPhotography
Colour photograph taken by Pfenninger in Brighton and registered for copyright in 1910
Three colour lantern slide of children playing on a Brighton beach 6 August 1906

In 1906, Pfenninger built a special camera to his own design using 3-colour separated plates from which full-colour photographic images could be created. That summer Pfenninger used this tri-colour, single exposure camera to create some of the first colour photographs, using the parks and beaches of Brighton as scenes.[2] His camera was based upon J.W. Bennetto's one-shot camera of 1897 in which three separation negatives were obtained at a single exposure. Pfenninger tried to use the same system but found that the refracted image was shorter from top to bottom,[3] his solution was to add a glass plate at the same angle, but opposite direction, to the Bennetto reflector.

In 1921,[4] under the pseudonym O. Reg, he wrote Byepaths of Colour Photography in which he discusses in technical detail, the history and theory of developments in subtractive colour photography.

References edit

  1. ^ GRO Croydon Vol. 2a Page 912
  2. ^ "Otto Pfenninger - Brighton Photo". www.photohistory-sussex.co.uk. Retrieved 2022-09-15.
  3. ^ Brighton and Hove Natural History and Philosophical Society, Abstracts of Papers, Pfenninger lecture 6 December 1907, accessed 17 September 2011
  4. ^ E.P. Dutton & Co., New York. The book bears no publication date and other sources state 1924

External links edit

  • Byepaths of Colour Photography, available online