In 1888 Henry Charles Bond of England secured a patent for three color photography and printing. This patent described the use of carefully created color screens placed in the camera to obtain the correct color information of the primary colors on dry plates and then using these to create complimentary bichromated gelatin prints to be placed on glass for collotype or on stone for lithography. Once placed as bicromated gelatin matrixes “Each of the three images is now inked up with the suitable coloured ink and each colour is printed in turn on the same piece of paper as in chromolithography.” (patent abstract Pat. #13,301, 1888). Wall’s History of Color (pg. 340) states that the Bond patent, was used by Waterlow & Sons Ltd., England, who referred to it as “Chromotype" 1892. (]oseph Albert and Johann Obernetter experimented with three color collotype in the 1870’s as did Edward Bierstadt). Hanson
Hanson, David Checklist of photomechanical processes and printing 1825-1910, 2017 p. 36