Gasparcolor. I understand the camera would shoot 72 FPS through alternating primary colour filters to produce a strip of panchromatic film (b&w) with alternating colour records ( recorded as different shades of grey) of the blue; green and red light approximating to one 24th of a second. Then each colour records would be used to develop three colours on the Gasparcolor print film frame. A very neat system good colour fidelity. Avoids problems of registration you can get with technicolor system iv.very stable colours as well.However you much movement and you have issues with colour fringing.
Cool.
The parrot is so cute!!!
Might be one of the greatest logos of the 1930s. It's also good to see it in colour.
It's beautiful!
It should be the best logo ever! It's also my favorite.
I LOVE BRITISH LOGOS!
Colour on the Thames (1935)
87 years ago
The G in the German and British version remind me of G in the old Gaumont logos from the 1910's.
That's my #25 favorite logo underneath Entertainment One (2015-)!
What film have you found with the German version?
Gasparcolor. I understand the camera would shoot 72 FPS through alternating primary colour filters to produce a strip of panchromatic film (b&w) with alternating colour records ( recorded as different shades of grey) of the blue; green and red light approximating to one 24th of a second. Then each colour records would be used to develop three colours on the Gasparcolor print film frame. A very neat system good colour fidelity. Avoids problems of registration you can get with technicolor system iv.very stable colours as well.However you much movement and you have issues with colour fringing.
This is a kind of German Technicolor
You mean British AND German Technicolor?
I see that's British logo.
"Gaspar-Color" was somewhere inbetween "Cinecolor" and "two-strip Technicolor". In any case, it faded away by the end of the '30s.
The British version of this logo is taken from “Colour on the Thames” (1935)
0:15
Is this the "Eurpoean Technicolor"?
Yes of course it is!
What movie is this?
It's from "Colour on the Thames"
BIRD IS DIE