Early Color Film BEFORE The Wizard of Oz
Long before The Wizard of Oz amazed audiences with its Technicolor creation of the fantastical world of Oz in 1939, filmmakers had already been using color for over 40 years. Whether hand painted each frame of a film to add color or using natural color process made by companies like Kineamcolor and Technicolor, these early color films reveal are a oft-forgotten but visually stunning piece of history that deserves much more attention. Starting with the very first uses of color onscreen in the 1890s, I explore the inventions and films of silent and early sound cinema that filmmakers experimented with to slowly learn how to make color look natural, emotional, and cinematic just as it appears in The Wizard of Oz and color films that came after. CHAPTERS 00:00 - Before the Wizard of Oz 00:32 - The First Color Films 04:32 - Natural Color Processes 10:32 - Me in Technicolor 10:47 - Two-Strip Technicolor 13:22 - Three-Strip Technicolor 20:46 - The Wizard of Oz and Beyond 23:51 - More Silent Movies SEIZURE WARNING Flashing lights at 07:17 for recreation of Technicolor's first natural color process. CREDITS Thank you to FilmColors.org for being an indispensable resource while putting together this script and finding archival resources to tell this colorful story. And huge thanks to Scott Higgins' 2007 book "Harnessing the Technicolor Rainbow : Color Design in The 1930s" for his essential discussion of color design of the early 1930s Technicolor films. Animation (13:41-13:53) adapted from: • The Dye Transfer Printing Process - Techni... Creative Commons Music by Jason Shaw on Audionautix.com used in this video: Tangerine Majestic Piano Atlantis Event Horizon Emily Walks Away Antarctica A Tall Ship Meditation

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