Technicolor$81934$ - ορισμός. Τι είναι το Technicolor$81934$
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Τι (ποιος) είναι Technicolor$81934$ - ορισμός

1949 FILM
Technicolor for industrial films

Technicolor Federal Credit Union         
Technicolor federal credit union
Technicolor Federal Credit Union (or Technicolor FCU) is a federally chartered multiple common-bond credit union – a cooperative financial institution that is owned and controlled by its members and operated for the purpose of offering lower rates on loans, lower fees on services and higher returns on savings. Headquartered in Burbank, California, Technicolor Federal Credit Union is regulated under the authority of the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA), an agency of the U.
Technicolor         
  • "Technicolor is natural color" Paul Whiteman stars in the King of Jazz ad from ''[[The Film Daily]]'', 1930
  • A Three-strip Technicolor camera from the 1930s
  • A frame from ''[[The Toll of the Sea]]'' (1922), the first generally released Technicolor film, and the first to use a two-strip subtractive color process
  • Hollywood]].
  • The Phantom of the Opera]]'' (1925). The film was one of the earliest uses of the process on interior sets, and demonstrated its versatility.
  • 1930 advertisement featuring [[Maurice Chevalier]] in ''[[Paramount on Parade]]''
  • Technicolor logo since 2010
  • A frame from a surviving fragment of ''[[The Gulf Between]]'' (1917), the first publicly shown Technicolor film
  • The ending card for a 1936 [[Warner Bros.]] ''[[Merrie Melodies]]'' cartoon with an "In Technicolor" credit. Many animation companies during the 1930s and 1940s used Technicolor for their cartoon shorts.
COLOR MOTION PICTURE PROCESS
John Hay Whitney/Technicolor; The Technicolor Corporation; Technicolor Corporation; Color by Technicolor; Techni color; Techni Color; Technecolor; Two-color Technicolor; Technicolor (camera); Three-strip Technicolor; Two-strip Technicolor; 3-strip film; 3-strip Technicolor; Two-strip Technicolour; Technicolor film
Technicolor is a series of color motion picture processes, the first version dating back to 1916, and followed by improved versions over several decades.
Technicolor         
  • "Technicolor is natural color" Paul Whiteman stars in the King of Jazz ad from ''[[The Film Daily]]'', 1930
  • A Three-strip Technicolor camera from the 1930s
  • A frame from ''[[The Toll of the Sea]]'' (1922), the first generally released Technicolor film, and the first to use a two-strip subtractive color process
  • Hollywood]].
  • The Phantom of the Opera]]'' (1925). The film was one of the earliest uses of the process on interior sets, and demonstrated its versatility.
  • 1930 advertisement featuring [[Maurice Chevalier]] in ''[[Paramount on Parade]]''
  • Technicolor logo since 2010
  • A frame from a surviving fragment of ''[[The Gulf Between]]'' (1917), the first publicly shown Technicolor film
  • The ending card for a 1936 [[Warner Bros.]] ''[[Merrie Melodies]]'' cartoon with an "In Technicolor" credit. Many animation companies during the 1930s and 1940s used Technicolor for their cartoon shorts.
COLOR MOTION PICTURE PROCESS
John Hay Whitney/Technicolor; The Technicolor Corporation; Technicolor Corporation; Color by Technicolor; Techni color; Techni Color; Technecolor; Two-color Technicolor; Technicolor (camera); Three-strip Technicolor; Two-strip Technicolor; 3-strip film; 3-strip Technicolor; Two-strip Technicolour; Technicolor film
n. (T) in Technicolor

Βικιπαίδεια

Technicolor for Industrial Films

Technicolor for Industrial Films (1949) is a sponsored film about how Technicolor can be used in industrial films. The film features footage of various objects in Technicolor, showing how it can be used in filmmaking. One scene shows a bunch of everyday goods, first being shown in black-and-white, then in Technicolor.

The film is notable because it's an ephemeral film about ephemeral films, and very few ephemeral films were made about ephemeral films at the time this film was made. The film is now in the public domain.

Technicolor for Industrial Films was preserved by the Academy Film Archive in 1995.