Sepia is a tone on tone usually reserved for photographs vs color.. it can be brown tones or tones of gray and black..
Reinthal & Newman Publishers, N.Y.
Picture Effects
I think the word you are looking for is "sepia".
yes
it is a brown tone. Usually found as a type of "finish" for photographs
It is used to replace some of the developed silver in a black and white photograph with an inert dye. This increased the archival quality of the print and could also be employed to increase the D-Max (maximum density) of the print. When used for those purposes, the toner chosen was usually Selenium on cool tone papers, as warm tone papers could produce brown to blue-black to purple tones, depending on the paper tone. To achieve a brown tone somewhat like an old Daguerreotype, Sepia toner would be used. In the former case, print exposure often had to be curtailed slightly to prevent the toned print from becoming too dark, whereas brown toning usually required slightly more exposure in the initial print.
In sepia tone and Technicolor is how "The Wizard of Oz" was made.Specifically, the beginning and ending sequences in the beloved 1939 movie version were shot in sepia tone, which looked black-and-white on black-and-white television sets. The in-between sequences were intended to represent the vibrantly colorful land of Oz. They were filmed in Technicolor.
sepia sepia
You can reduce the saturation a bit, then increase the brightness. By adjust the Hue you can further give it a worn or sepia tone.
Sepia is a deep brown colour.
Portrait in Sepia was created in 2000.