4.5 (732) · $ 22.50 · In stock
3-strip Technicolor camera from the 1930s. Two strips of 35 mm black and white film negative, one sensitive to blue light and the other to red light, ran together through an aperture behind a magenta filter, which allowed blue and red light to pass through. A third film strip of black and white film negative ran through a separate aperture, behind a green filter. The two apertures were positioned at 90 degrees to each other, and a gold-flecked mirror positioned at 45 degrees behind the lens allowed 1/3 of the incoming light to go directly through to the green-filtered aperture, and reflected the remaining light to the magenta-filtered aperture. Because of this division of light between three film strips, Technicolor photography required much more lighting than black and white photography.
Museum of the Moving Image
Museum of the Moving Image
Inside Museum of the Moving Image's Expansive 'Walking Dead' Exhibit: Fandom, Legacy and Behind-the-Scenes Treats
Museum of the Moving Image (@MovingImageNYC) / X
Zombie' virus spent 48,500 years in permafrost: scientists
Countering the Surge of Zombie Buildings
SEE IT: Disturbing video footage shows trio of 'zombie' women staggering on sidewalk after allegedly getting high on heroin – New York Daily News
Screenings & Series – Museum of the Moving Image
File:Museum of the Moving Image.jpg - Wikipedia
The 100 Hardest Video Game Levels, Ranked
Museum of the Moving Image (@MovingImageNYC) / X
What the History of Zombie Malls Tells Us About the Future of Offices - Bloomberg
Museum of the Moving Image (@MovingImageNYC) / X
Museum of the Moving Image