A collector send me recently a message asking about spotting reproductions and distinguishing them from PERIOD originals... As I always say there is not a "rule of thumb" to determine when the photo has been made. He kept arguing with me that if the photos have underlined or plain AGFA BROVIRA or LUPEX logos they are originals. No matter what I said, he insisted that photos developed after WWII on the AGFA paper have a line above the logo and everything else is WWII original. I could not persuade him otherwise.
As an example, I would like to post here several scans of photos taken in 1949 and developed a year later - in 1950. Thus these photographs are NOT WWII originals, yet developed on WWII and early post-WWII paper...
Anyway, I just wanted to show those interested (or new) to this hobby that there is much more to it than AGFA logos... There were massive amounts of photos developed on such paper until mid 1950s...
Best, Mark
As an example, I would like to post here several scans of photos taken in 1949 and developed a year later - in 1950. Thus these photographs are NOT WWII originals, yet developed on WWII and early post-WWII paper...
Anyway, I just wanted to show those interested (or new) to this hobby that there is much more to it than AGFA logos... There were massive amounts of photos developed on such paper until mid 1950s...
Best, Mark
Comment