On Wednesday, 1 April 2015 02:19:46 UTC+11, Scott Dorsey wrote:
cinemad <cinemad@hotmail.com> wrote:
In 1942 Kodak and Technicolor introduced a low contrast colour reversal fil= >m
designated "Monopack" which allowed the use of one film in the camera rathe= >r than the three required for the 3-strip system. This film had the code nu= >mber 5267. Four years later this film was made available in 16mm and was us= >ed for The Cisco Kid"television series. Its code designation was 5268.
That would be 5268 for 35mm, or 7268 for the same stock in 16mm. And in
According To A History of Motion Picture Color Technology the 16mm stock was referred to as 5268. Kodak didn't start using the "7" prefix for 16mm until the fifties
Kodachrome 11 was introduced in 1961 and used the K2 process.
From my memory Kodachrome 40 used the code number 7270.
1946 that would have been K-1 process. I don't think they want to K-11
until 1955
But what I came to know and love as 5268/7268 was "Kodachrome 40," which was a K-14 stock, which would make it post-1974. It gets confusing when
Kodak reuses numbers.
--scott
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