Frederic Eugene Ives

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An 1898 color stereophotograph by Frederick Ives, as reconstructed from the negatives.
An 1898 color stereophotograph by Frederick Ives, as reconstructed from the negatives.[1]
The three negatives for the above stereophotograph.
The three negatives for the above stereophotograph.

Frederick Eugene Ives (18561937) was a U.S. inventor, born at Litchfield, Connecticut. In 187478 he had charge of the photographic laboratory at Cornell University. He moved to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he was one of the founding members, in 1885, of the Photographic Society of Philadelphia.[2]

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Ives was a pioneer of color and stereoscopic photography, and demonstrated a system of natural color photography at the 1885 Novelties Exposition of the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia.[1]

As early as 1900, Ives was tinkering with stereoscopic motion pictures. By 1923, he and fellow inventor Jacob Leventhal were producing a popular series of 3-D novelty shorts called Plastigrams. The first one was for Educational Pictures, and the latter ones for Pathé Films.

His son Herbert E. Ives was a pioneer of telephotography and television, including color facsimile.

Although he held a patent for the half-tone letterpress as of 1878, the half-tone photoengraving process was first invented by Canadians George-Édouard Desbarats and William Leggo. The process was first employed in 1869 in the Canadian Illustrated News.

  1. ^ a b Louis Walton Sipley, A Half Century of Color, New York: The Macmillan Company, 1951.
  2. ^ Photographic Society of Philadelphia official website.

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