Ireland's Colourful Past

Ireland's Colourful Past Professional colour restoration service, established in 2015, work displayed internationally

26/05/2023

little bit behind the scenes

1927

Infantry squad with Lewis gun in arrow head formation
Glass plate negative showing a section of soldiers practising their tactical drills. This formation was know as the "arrow head" formation. Note the "Vickers helmets", Lee Enfield rifles and Lewis Machine guns.

Original Source Military Archives

Now we're hurling!Glass plate negative showing a company quarter master sergeant (CQMS) from the 4th battalion, Southern...
23/05/2023

Now we're hurling!

Glass plate negative showing a company quarter master sergeant (CQMS) from the 4th battalion, Southern Command showing how to make a hurl.

Original Image Source, Military Archives

11 June 1943WexfordFollowing the return of a group of selected officers who had undergone British Army commando courses,...
23/05/2023

11 June 1943

Wexford

Following the return of a group of selected officers who had undergone British Army commando courses, a greater emphasis was placed on fieldcraft training and fitness.

Original Source Military Archives

Wounded National Army SoldiersThree Portraits from the Desmond Fitzgerald CollectionNo.1 "Head and shoulders portrait by...
28/11/2022

Wounded National Army Soldiers
Three Portraits from the Desmond Fitzgerald Collection
No.1 "Head and shoulders portrait by C and L Walsh of an Irish Free State Army soldier propped up on pillows in a hospital bed with folded arms; caption identifies him as William Dunn, 1st battalion, Guards, wounded in the leg on O'Connell Street, Dublin."
No.2 "Head and shoulders portrait by C and L Walsh of an Irish Free State Army soldier wearing his uniform coat but sitting in a wicker chair; caption identifies him as John Foley, 3rd battalion, wounded in the thigh."
No.3 "Head and shoulders portrait by C and L Walsh of an Irish Free State Army soldier propped up on pillows with an open book on his lap; caption identifies him as Thomas McMahon, armoured car and machine gun section, who sustained a hip wound on Dame Street, Dublin.
As with all restorations I carry out, no Artificial Intelligence Apps (AI) are used in my work.
Images are watermarked, refrain from editing, cropping or producing/using these images without prior consent.

Beggars Bush, 1922Members of the National Army Entering through the main gate of Beggars Bush Barracks, Haddington Road....
28/11/2022

Beggars Bush,
1922

Members of the National Army
Entering through the main gate of Beggars Bush Barracks, Haddington Road.

As with all restorations I carry out, no Artificial Intelligence Apps (AI) are used in my work.
Images are watermarked, refrain from editing, cropping or producing/using these images without prior consent.

Nice Local Interest piece from near homeJohn Joly  (1 November 1857 – 8 December 1933) was an Irish physicist and profes...
27/11/2022

Nice Local Interest piece from near home

John Joly
(1 November 1857 – 8 December 1933)

was an Irish physicist and professor of geology at the University of Dublin, known for his development of radiotherapy in the treatment of cancer. He is also known for developing techniques to more accurately estimate the age of a geological period, based on radioactive elements present in minerals, the uranium–thorium dating.

Joly was born in Holywood House (the Church of Ireland Rectory), Bracknagh, County Offaly, Ireland. He was a second cousin of Charles Jasper Joly, the astronomer. He entered Trinity College, Dublin in 1876, graduating in Engineering in 1882 in first place with several special certificates in branches of engineering, at the same time obtaining a First Class Honours in modern literature. He worked as a demonstrator in Trinity's Engineering and Physics departments before succeeding William Johnson Sollas in the Chair of Geology and Mineralogy in 1897, a position which he held until his death in 1933 in Dublin. A keen yachtsman, he served as a Commissioner for Irish Lights.

Joly joined the Royal Dublin Society in 1881 while still a student, and was a frequent contributor of papers. His first scientific paper was published in 1883, on the use of meteorological instruments at a distance. He published over 270 scientific papers.

In 1886, Joly proposed a theory on the slipperiness of ice. According to Joly, when the ice is forced to contract by the pressure applied, a film of liquid water is formed, upon which actual slipping occurs. Although this theory has recently been superseded, it was the first time someone tried to explain the mechanism behind ice low friction.

On 17 May 1899 Joly read his paper, "An Estimate of the Geological Age of the Earth", to the Royal Dublin Society. In it, he proposed to calculate the age of the earth from the accumulation of sodium in the waters of the oceans. He calculated the rate at which the oceans should have accumulated sodium from erosion processes, and determined that the oceans were about 80 to 100 million years old. The paper was quickly published, appearing 4 months later in the Society's Scientific Transactions. Although this method was later considered inaccurate and was consequently superseded, it radically modified the results of other methods in use at the time.

In 1903 he published an article in Nature in which he discussed the possibility of using radium to date the Earth and went on to study the radioactive content of the Earth's crust to formulate a theory of thermal cycles, and examined the radioactive constituents of certain rocks as a means of calculating their age. Working in collaboration with Sir Ernest Rutherford, he used radioactive decay in minerals to estimate, in 1913, that the beginning of the Devonian period could not be less than 400 million years ago, an estimate which is in line with modern calculations.

Joly served as President of Section C (Geology) when the British Association for the Advancement of Science which met in Dublin in 1908, during which he presented his paper "Uranium and Geology" an address to the society. This work described radioactive materials in rocks and their part in the generation of the Earth's internal heat.

Along with his friend Henry Horatio Dixon, Joly also put forward the cohesion-tension theory which is now thought to be the main mechanism for the upward movement of water in plants.

In 1914 he developed a method of extracting radium and applied it in the treatment of cancer. As a Governor of Dr Steevens' Hospital in Dublin, in collaboration with Walter Stevenson he devised radiotherapy methods and promoted the establishment by the Royal Dublin Society of the Irish Radium Institute where they pioneered the "Dublin method" of using a hollow needle for deep radiotherapy, a technique that later entered worldwide use. The Radium Institute also supplied capillary tubes containing radon to hospitals for some years for use in the treatment of tumours.

Joly also invented a photometer for measuring light intensity, a meldometer for measuring the melting points of minerals, a differential steam calorimeter for measuring specific heats and a constant-volume gas thermometer, all of which bear his name, together with one of the first color photographic processes, the Joly colour screen. It was the first successful process for producing color images from a single photographic plate.

Joly was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of London in 1892, was awarded the Boyle Medal of the Royal Dublin Society in 1911, the Royal Medal of the Royal Society of London in 1910, and the Murchison Medal of the Geological Society of London in 1923. He was also conferred honorary degrees by the National University of Ireland, the University of Cambridge, and the University of Michigan. After his death, his friends subscribed the sum of £1,700 to set up a memorial fund which is still used to promote the annual Joly Memorial Lectures at the University of Dublin, which were inaugurated by Sir Ernest Rutherford in 1935. He is also remembered by the Joly Geological Society, a student geological association established in 1960.

In 1930 Oliver Sheppard was commissioned by Trinity College Dublin and the Royal Dublin Society to make them copies of a bust of Joly.

In 1973 a crater on Mars was named in his honour.

As with all restorations I carry out, no Artificial Intelligence Apps (AI) are used in my work.
Images are watermarked, refrain from editing, cropping or producing/using these images without prior consent.

Thomas Ashe1885 - 1917"They have branded me a criminal. Even though if I die, I die in a good cause"- Thomas AsheAs with...
27/11/2022

Thomas Ashe
1885 - 1917
"They have branded me a criminal. Even though if I die, I die in a good cause"
- Thomas Ashe
As with all restorations I carry out, no Artificial Intelligence Apps (AI) are used in my work.
Images are watermarked, refrain from editing, cropping or producing/using these images without prior consent.

Partial Colour Restoration on this well known image from the funeral cortege of Arthur Griffith
16/08/2022

Partial Colour Restoration on this well known image from the funeral cortege of Arthur Griffith

With less than 20 days until the centenary of the death of General Michael Collins, I was asked by a few people about po...
03/08/2022

With less than 20 days until the centenary of the death of General Michael Collins, I was asked by a few people about possible centenary prints, today I did up three quick edits.
What do people think?
Many thanks

As with all restorations I carry out, no Artificial Intelligence Apps (AI) are used in my work.
Images are watermarked, refrain from editing, cropping or producing/using these images without prior consent.

Something myself and Michael B Barry have been working on, hence the lack of posts lately
13/07/2022

Something myself and Michael B Barry have been working on, hence the lack of posts lately

Delighted to announce that last night we were in attendance at Launch of the Gill Books Autumn Catalogue 2022.
Amongst all the fantastic books being launched we are pleased to announce that The Irish Civil War In Colour is amongst them.
The book itself will be released in September so make sure to keep an eye out.

Below are the pre-order links for both Eason and Dubray
https://www.easons.com/Irish-Civil-War-In-Colour-HB-Michael-Barry-John-O-Byrne-9780717195862

https://www.dubraybooks.ie/The-Irish-Civil-War-in-Colour_9780717195862

To view the entire catalogue of releases follow this link
https://issuu.com/gill_books/docs/gill_books_autumn_winter_catalogue_2022



Memorial Framed PrintsOver the past few years I have done a number of memorial prints and frames for people and have dec...
23/02/2022

Memorial Framed Prints
Over the past few years I have done a number of memorial prints and frames for people and have decided now to advertise, with this year being the centenary of the civil war its a unique way to commemorate your family member participation in Irish History, the prints would include a restored/coloured image, or where a photograph is not available an appropriate crest/imagery can be added, also all relevant information that is provided will be added to the print.
Several sizes of both printed and framed final products are available.

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Rathangan

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