KODACHROME
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZpaNJqF4po
a must to play while viewing these images.
I can remember the first roll of Kodachrome I ever photographed. I had to send it all the way to Kansas City to be processed. I can still remember at least 2 photographs I made with that ro
Lady and 2) my Dad's Buick Road master Blue hard top. Later I read
that the Kodak lab's processor franchised to Kansas City cost $1,000,000.
dollars. A lot of money. I was always fascinated about studying about
Kodachrome. In high school I read that the roll of film had 3 layers of B &
W film each sensitive to a different spectrum of light 1) layer sensitive to
red, 2) layer sensitive to blue and 3) layer sensitive to green that after many
steps of processing would produce a layer of cyan, a layer of magenta, and a
layer of yellow dye. the three layers of dye sandwiched together produced a
color picture. And what a glorious picture that never faded. That is why
today's Kodachrome images are not faded like all your other color images.
Claims on today's colored paper photos will last 100 years. Hope you're are
around to check this claim out. A wonderful scientist, chemist, Kodak films
engineer, and good friend, Bob Shanebrook has written the definitive book on
Kodachrome and it's on sale at Barnes and Noble. Check it out.
It wasn't easy being green. Or yellow or red or blue, for that
matter. While color photography had been around in one form or another since
the 1860s, until the Eastman Kodak Company came out with its Kodachrome film in
1935, those wishing to capture a color image had to deal with heavy glass
plates, tripods, long exposures and an exacting development procedure, all of
which resulted in less than satisfactory pictures — dull, tinted images that
were far from true to life. So while Kodak's discontinuation of the iconic
color film will affect only the most devoted photo buffs — sales of Kodachrome
account for less than 1% of the company's revenue — the June 22, 2013
announcement breaks one of the largest remaining ties to the era of pre-digital
photography. It also ends a legacy that includes some of the most enduring
images of 20th century America. (See photos by Richard Avedon.)
The Kodachrome process — in which three emulsions, each sensitive
to a primary color, are coated on a single film base — was the brainchild of
Leopold Godowsky Jr. and Leopold Mannes, two musicians turned scientists who
worked at Kodak's research facility in Rochester, N.Y. Disappointed by the poor
quality of a "color" movie they saw in 1916, the two Leopold's spent
years perfecting their technique, which Kodak first utilized in 1935 in 16-mm
movie film. The next year, they tried out the process on film for still
cameras, although the procedure was not for the hobbyist: the earliest 35-mm
Kodachrome went for $3.50 a roll, or about $54 in today's dollars.
While all color films have dyes printed directly onto the film
stock, Kodachrome dye isn't added until the development process. "The film
itself is basically black and white," says Grant Steinle, vice president
of operations at Dwayne's Photo in Parsons, Kans., the only photo-processing
center still equipped to develop Kodachrome film. Steinle says that although
all dyes will fade over time, if Kodachrome is stored properly it can be good
for up to 100 years. The film's archival abilities, coupled with its
comparative ease of use, made it the dominant film for both professionals and
amateurs for most of the 20th century. Kodachrome captured a color version of
the Hindenburg's fireball explosion in 1936. It accompanied Edmund Hillary to
the top of Mount Everest in 1953. Abraham Zapruder was filming with 8-mm
Kodachrome in Dallas when he accidentally captured President Kennedy's
assassination. National Geographic photographer Steve McCurry used it to
capture the haunting green-gray eyes of an Afghan refugee girl in 1985 in what
is still the magazine's most enduring cover image. And a haunting image
of her rephotographed as a young woman in 2010, an Afghan woman of 25.