- Star Wars in Technicolor IB | BFI - Steve Hoffman Music Forums
In our latest Inside the Archive video we go far, far away - all the way back to 1977 - to examine an original IB Technicolor dye-transfer print of Star Wars (Dir George Lucas, 1977), held in the BFI National Archive's collections
- Lets Talk Technicolor: 2-Strip, 3-Strip, Everyone Strip
Technicolor threads have been started and died a quick death around here, which is surprising given most of our ages But doesn't the Golden Age (1934-1955) of Three-strip Technicolor really turn you on, or does it look garish? Here's one from The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939)
- Are Technicolor and Deluxe still relevant? - Steve Hoffman Music Forums
Technicolor sorta kinda exists in digital filmmaking today, in three ways: 1) Technicolor still exists as a post-production facility, though all their labs in North America are now closed; 2) filmmakers sometimes want a very vivid, old-school "Technicolor look," which we can do electronically simply by punching up the saturation levels; and 3
- Next Gateway XB8 - Technicolor CGM4981COM Wi-Fi 6E - Comcast XFINITY . . .
Forum discussion: Looks like we have a new DOCSIS gateway by Technicolor on the horizon A new listing went up today mentioning a quote;CGM4981COM quote; Not much info about it as the documents
- Technicolor TC4400 | DSLReports, ISP Information
TC4400 by Technicolor Thomson Alcatel information and hardware knowledge base
- Best looking three strip Technicolor film on blu-ray
Again, not a 3 strip Technicolor movie It looks stunning because of the extra clarity of the Vistavision process (twice the film area), and probably the release prints were done by Technicolor, but the film itself was shot on "conventional" modern Eastman color negative, and not on three separate B W negatives (which is what 3-strip consisted in)
- Lets Talk Technicolor: 2-Strip, 3-Strip, Everyone Strip
Yeah, you're right about the capture filtering process to arrive at gray scale B W positives for dye transfer IB color positives Hears an article I bookmarked from the previous discussions on Technicolor where the original camera did use red, green and blue filters Technicolor 3 Strip It's the final matrices cyan, magenta and yellow hues you have to get right to get the classic look or
- Films with the Movielab or Metrocolor process
Note that Technicolor, CFI, Metrocolor, and Movielab all used similar lab practices and Kodak stock, so there was no real technical difference between the work they did There were studios that would shoot on Kodak negative stock but print on Fuji film in order to save a few cents
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