I think the word you are looking for is "sepia".
Hmmm..visually it may be referring to an overtone of a color used in the photograph.
Earthworms are generally some type of a brown tone.
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.
Earthrise is the name given to a photograph of the Earth taken by astronaut ... Rowell called it "the most influential environmental photograph ever taken
I think a portrait most commonly.
Hmmm..visually it may be referring to an overtone of a color used in the photograph.
Picture Effects
The cast of The Photograph and the Blotter - 1913 includes: Edna Flugrath as Elsie Brown
Yes, but the tone of the brown should match the tone of the suit. Darker grey suit: darker brown shoes. Lighter grey: lighter brown.
Beige is a light tan. Tan is a light brown.
Brown
Brown
Earthworms are generally some type of a brown tone.
Its called a "Photo Bomb"
Yes she was offended because of her skin tone she was/is brown(light) and everyone (almost) from Barbados has a Brown (dark) tone to their skin
dark brown to auburn brown to black to grey to white to orange
A nice, light brown.