144 Moving Images: Making Movies, Understanding Media
Color photography originates from the principles that are observed in
the functions of human eyesight and the properties of the color spectrum. As
they experimented with color photography, scientists understood that the full
range of colors in the spectrum could be duplicated through combinations
of red, green, and blue or their opposites, cyan, magenta, and yellow.
Technicolor and the Three-Strip System
Films in the fi rst decades of the cinema used hand tinting of frames or dyeing
of sections of the roll, including the Edison company’s Annabella’s Dance,
Méliès’s A Trip to the Moon, and many features of the 1920s that used tints
for particular scenes, whether red for fi re or blue for moonlight.
Red Green Blue
Cyan Magenta Yellow
Figure 4-26 Illustration image that shows the colors separated into the
three primary hues of red, green, and blue. With the Technicolor system,
there would have been three negatives of cyan, magenta, and yellow
that would combine in the positive print to produce a full-color image.
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