This picture is actually a lot more impressive than it looks, because there were no color cameras available when it was taken. Instead, he had to take three different pictures, using three different color filters like RGB, and then combine them to make it color.
From one source:
Prokudin-Gorsky’s camera design required a camera operator to take three individual negatives after each other. Given that Prokudin-Gorsky is seen posing in the image, it is more likely that one of his assistants took the picture.
To this day, nobody knows exactly what camera Prokudin-Gorsky used, as no documentation of his equipment is known to exist, but it was likely a large wooden camera with a special holder for a sliding glass negative plate, taking three sequential monochrome photographs, each through a different coloured filter.
This sounds similar to when I took 3 different pictures of a panoramic view and stitched them together. It took me hours and hours to get it right. Now you can just point your phone and scroll it across the view and the camera will automatically stitch it all together.
This picture is actually a lot more impressive than it looks, because there were no color cameras available when it was taken. Instead, he had to take three different pictures, using three different color filters like RGB, and then combine them to make it color.
From one source:
And another
This sounds similar to when I took 3 different pictures of a panoramic view and stitched them together. It took me hours and hours to get it right. Now you can just point your phone and scroll it across the view and the camera will automatically stitch it all together.