![]() Give it a watch a learn a bit of film history as well as the way you can use innovation to bring new life to your images. Originally starting with a two-strip process, the company is most known today for their durable three-strip process, combining three distinct strips of color film, a red, a blue, and a green, to create vibrant images that leapt off of movie screens for the majority of the 20th Century in films such as “The Wizard of Oz” all the way up to “The Godfather: Part II” in 1974.īut how exactly did it work? In this awesome new video from Vox, Phil Edwards discusses the process and the history of Technicolor and offers some interesting behind the scenes insights into one of the most famous films of all time. Of particular note to me was learning exactly what was necessary to make Dorothy’s famous transition from black and white to color a reality. ![]() Burton Wescott, the name was derived from the last initial of Kalmus and Comstock’s alma mater, M.I.T. ![]() Founded in Boston in 1914 by Herbert Kalmus, Daniel Frost Comstock, and W. ![]()
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