The First Colour Moving Pictures at the National Science and Media Museum

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  • Опубліковано 11 вер 2012
  • The first colour moving pictures are on display in the Kodak Gallery at the National Science and Media Museum, Bradford. Find out more: www.scienceandmediamuseum.org...
    Lee and Turner's invention has always been regarded by film historians as a practical failure but it has now been 'unlocked' through digital technology, revealing the images produced by the process for the first time in over a hundred years.
    Turner developed his complex three-colour process with support, first from Lee and then from the American film entrepreneur, Charles Urban. Using a camera and projector made by Brighton-based engineer Alfred Darling, Turner developed the process sufficiently to take various test films of colourful subjects such as a macaw, a goldfish in a bowl against a brightly striped background and his children playing with sunflowers, before his death in 1903 aged just 29. Urban went on to develop the process further with the pioneer film-maker George Albert Smith which resulted in the commercially successful Kinemacolor system, patented in 1906 and first exhibited to the public in 1909. Sadly, Turner's widow never received a penny from her husband's invention.
    On discovering the film, Michael Harvey, Curator of Cinematography, worked with film archive experts Brian Pritchard and David Cleveland to reconstruct the moving footage in colour following the precise method laid out in Lee and Turner's 1899 patent. They turned to experts at the BFI National Archive who were able to undertake the delicate work of transforming the film material into digital files, and so the team were able to watch these vivid colour moving pictures for the first time, over one hundred years since they had been made.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 162

  • @MikeeMerge
    @MikeeMerge 12 років тому +16

    I love early film. It's the closest thing we have to time travel.

  • @TheStockwell
    @TheStockwell 12 років тому +3

    Turner's ingenuity in creating this system in 1902, which he never saw in action (he died the next year) is astounding. The lengths gone through 110 years later to restore it are incredible. I'm assuming this might be a first attempt at what might be an even more thorough and meticulous fuller restoration.

  • @sikkuburo5267
    @sikkuburo5267 4 роки тому +7

    Can we please have a high-quality version of these films in their entirety without the watermark?

  • @JMChladek
    @JMChladek 12 років тому +2

    This color film process reminds me of one of the early color television processes which also used a mechanical color wheel to both film the images in color filters and re-output them at the receiving end. Nice to see that somebody was thinking along similar lines all those years ago and the images are fascinating to watch.

  • @Linkage1992
    @Linkage1992 12 років тому +1

    Seeing old photos and videos in colour makes it seem like not that long ago.

  • @Ylop46
    @Ylop46 12 років тому +1

    it is kinda cool that after hundred years we could shoot with something infinitesimally small

  • @CearyAuryn
    @CearyAuryn 12 років тому +1

    I agree with you. It's like a separate life from that which we live now. We are privileged to be able to witness this! I was excited to see this. :)

  • @axford
    @axford 12 років тому +1

    I was thinking along similar lines. However, a lot of archiving is done on 35mm as it has been proven to be a stable format for many decades. In the 'digital era' a system can come in to play for a while and then be deemed obsolete in just a short while. Also, no one can say what the shelf life of a digital master will be. Therefore, studios still archive films, even those shot with digital cameras on 35mm negative for this reason.

  • @GibsonVienna
    @GibsonVienna 12 років тому

    HD in the 1900 Version. Unbelivable. Edward Turner was a Hero.

  • @recepakturk13n
    @recepakturk13n 4 роки тому +1

    That is amazing !!
    precursors

  • @karynellis8404
    @karynellis8404 3 роки тому

    Incredible! Just finding this now and I am utterly mesmerized.

  • @plsmodium
    @plsmodium 12 років тому

    Thank you for your great and important work, brothers!

  • @soulmercer
    @soulmercer Рік тому

    Extraordinary! Great work!

  • @DEricFranks
    @DEricFranks 12 років тому

    Amazing work, then and now.

  • @mllrgrl
    @mllrgrl 10 років тому

    This is so wonderful, the combination of such an amazing find by and the knowledge and patience of Mr Pritchard and Mr Cleveland lead to a gift for the entire world. :)

  • @uilmaramachadodemelo2416
    @uilmaramachadodemelo2416 Місяць тому

    TRABALHO MINUCIOSO E FASCINANTE! PARABÉNS! Obrigada pelo vídeo!

  • @swallin19
    @swallin19 12 років тому

    Very interesting, it raise the question of why the film was not archived properly or researched before. It had been known in references to Lee Turner and was assumed lost. I wonder if other films exist abroad of early processes an film standards. The film industry barely looks after 20year old material, let alone 108+ years ago. It is also a pity it is in Bradford and difficult apart from the area), to get to. This is a national resource and should be in London.

  • @patrickr991
    @patrickr991 10 років тому

    The quality is amazing !!!!

  • @zonie9872
    @zonie9872 11 років тому

    Absolutely unbelievable. Amazing

  • @CommunityGuidelines
    @CommunityGuidelines 12 років тому

    An amazing achievement, by both the originators and the restorationists! Bravo, gentlemen. For those interested in early color photography, I highly recommend the marvelous book "The Dawn of the Color Photograph: Albert Kahn's Archives of the Planet" which contains beautiful color photographs taken in 1909!

  • @leonardorosendodasilva
    @leonardorosendodasilva 11 років тому +1

    Incrível como naquela tempos já existia filme colorido

  • @BobDiaz123
    @BobDiaz123 12 років тому +1

    That is amazing !!!!!
    It was a lot of work to restore the film.

  • @ExtraTerrestrials
    @ExtraTerrestrials 12 років тому

    the quality for that time is better than most youtube videos nowadays

  • @michaelterry1000
    @michaelterry1000 12 років тому

    Thank you. More specifically I am looking for very early Television broadcasts. WWII in color is an excellent series. Thanks again

  • @user-wk2uf5yo7x
    @user-wk2uf5yo7x 6 років тому +1

    So many things changed since 100 years ago it's disheartening

  • @logicforfirstgraders
    @logicforfirstgraders 11 років тому

    It's because the 35mm is an image of the actual image rather than information of what the image is in an accepted code. It makes the copy into a standard format that is still useable without substantial knowledge of computing (if you're starting from scratch). All you need is a light and a screen. It's like an lp being an actual physical imprint of the noise, if you just have the needle following the grove you can hear the sound when you put your ear near to it.

  • @plsmodium
    @plsmodium 12 років тому

    Awesome! Thanks mate!

  • @RoseBudpony1
    @RoseBudpony1 5 років тому +1

    i loved seeing world war 2 or 1 in color on TV, (thats the shows title i think) it was cool & vibrant!

  • @lunatim
    @lunatim 12 років тому

    Unfreakingbelievable! I'm dimly aware of Kinemacolor by Urban and read somewhere that Friese-Greene made an experimental color clip, but I never heard of Edward Turner until now. This is really mind-blowing--whoo, hoo!

  • @Elrich89
    @Elrich89 10 років тому +15

    You're totally missing the point. The point is that physical film - that exists in the real world - survives. Digital data is entirely too vulnerable. It's a very, very bad idea to have digital-only archives.

    • @DoubleMonoLR
      @DoubleMonoLR 4 роки тому +2

      Digital data can be stored on tapes etc if necessary, it shouldn't be particularly difficult for future generations to recover the data assuming the tapes(or other meda) survive.
      Traditional film etc is also vulnerable anyway unfortunately, such as the vast amounts lost to fires.

    • @debranchelowtone
      @debranchelowtone 2 роки тому

      @@DoubleMonoLR For such a short film we can make several 35mm copies and store them in different vaults.

  • @SBARTSTV
    @SBARTSTV 12 років тому +1

    Wonderful

  • @dxdn_yt
    @dxdn_yt 12 років тому

    This is super cool!

  • @theprophet20
    @theprophet20 11 років тому

    Have you seen the posting on UA-cam, "Panoramic View of the Morecambe Sea Front (1901)"? It's incredibly clear and vivid, and with its atmospheric music, and the fact that some of the women are in mourning dress for Queen Victoria who died that year, as well as the frolicking children - I confess I find it almost heartbreaking...

  • @TeamCGS2005
    @TeamCGS2005 12 років тому

    Truly amazing.

  • @A1Huxley
    @A1Huxley 12 років тому

    The UK had mechanical colour and an option for a big line count tv system ready in the 1940's. It was mechanical, very large and would not be from the USA. The US selected to go with a local product that was smaller, less mechanical and would bring cash back to the USA for many years. The US did not want to rush into imports, so they waited. They got a "made in the USA" electronic system in the end.

  • @nicholearaiza5543
    @nicholearaiza5543 11 років тому

    Amazing!

  • @toresbe
    @toresbe 12 років тому

    I'm sorry, but if we disregard Baird's dead-end system, I'm quite certain that the first hybrid electronic/mechanical colour TV work (electronic pickup tube with a spinning colour filter) was done in the US by CBS, using the field-sequential and dot-sequential systems.
    Then came RCA's brilliant fully electronic compatible-colour system, later standardised as NTSC, which was also used with minor changes in Europe as PAL.

  • @nytecam
    @nytecam 12 років тому

    This is amazing news to see these first full colour movie clips of 110 yrs ago - it is a shame that Edward Turner died aged 28 and never perfected a projector to see his incredible work. Well done NMM for this 'discovery' BBC TV News interviewed Turner's granddaughter whose father is the little boy on the right in the garden movie.

  • @varnlestoff
    @varnlestoff 12 років тому

    amazing

  • @DaveYostCom
    @DaveYostCom 12 років тому

    Facinating. Please also make a proper restoration with registration and color correction.

  • @albear972
    @albear972 12 років тому

    Nice! I have to get some 3-D glasses to see the film better!

  • @geebe
    @geebe 12 років тому +1

    Show us the entire footage

  • @Elrich89
    @Elrich89 11 років тому

    You should read Camera Lucida by Roland Barthes. He discusses something called 'punctum', the overwhelming sense of mortality when looking at a photo or film. It's very moving!

  • @dudeinthesea
    @dudeinthesea 12 років тому

    2 people don't quite get that this technology is the earliest ancestor of UA-cam

  • @sheenshinesheen
    @sheenshinesheen 12 років тому

    wow 110 years ago and they had colour!!!

  • @toresbe
    @toresbe 12 років тому

    It's a frame-sequential system, of course - since there is no interlacing on film. :)
    Are you familiar with the still-photo works of Prokudin-Gorsky? If not, I suggest you google it.

  • @invincibleservant
    @invincibleservant 12 років тому +1

    I find it moving when people spell their, there, and they're correctly.

  • @NYCForeverbaby
    @NYCForeverbaby 12 років тому

    imovie has come a long way!

  • @PeterKoperdan
    @PeterKoperdan 12 років тому

    Great stuff. Although it would have been nice if the Prime Focus London did some more post-processing wizardry to make color separations register bit better..

  • @jmlbloom
    @jmlbloom 12 років тому

    where is the full video of the film?

  • @michaelterry1000
    @michaelterry1000 12 років тому

    Bravo, great story, I love early film/video technology. I have been looking for the earliest recorded television broadcasts. I cant seem to find anything previous to WWII. If anyone knows of 30's or WWII era video recording on the web please reply to this comment and tell me where it can be seen. Thank You.

  • @SO_DIGITAL
    @SO_DIGITAL 12 років тому

    I suppose to get the print scanned it would need to be in 35mm? It's a good point though. It would be interesting to see how a proper frame allignment, noise removal and color correction would make it look.

  • @prwexler
    @prwexler 11 років тому

    Wow! How smart. 3 b/w photos through color filters to produce a color image.

  • @Asterra2
    @Asterra2 12 років тому +1

    Fascinating and historically important, but the restoration process, particularly the 35mm optical copy, seems a little backward.
    Here's what I would have done: 2k scans of the original frames. Split into three video feeds, one for each color. Frame interpolation for each feed (at 3x the starting rate, to match the original film's framerate). Combine the result. This would give a smooth image without the heavy color bleeding you can see in anything that's actually moving or panning.

    • @debranchelowtone
      @debranchelowtone 2 роки тому

      I would love to do this. Is there a clean transfert of this film somewhere ?

  • @rg0057
    @rg0057 12 років тому

    Is there any information on who was the director/cinematographer of the seven clips excerpted here? Presumably Turner filmed his own family. But the rest?

  • @DrowningInTea
    @DrowningInTea 12 років тому

    Sometimes SSDs die without a reason while magnetic drive will tell you there is a problem by making more noise. Also TRIM makes data recovery in SSD basically impossible.

  • @xFnKxfighten
    @xFnKxfighten 12 років тому

    When is it being remade in 3D?

  • @sneo1537
    @sneo1537 12 років тому

    Awesome! ...Looks a bit like the CGI on Star Wars: Episode I.

  • @occasionalwind
    @occasionalwind 12 років тому

    The film historian Tom Trusky who passed away in 2009 would have loved to see this footage of the First Color Moving Pictures!

  • @oldbob1951
    @oldbob1951 12 років тому

    Here's a few pre-war tv broadcasts recorded on film directly from a tv receiver screen. Go to archive.org and search for these files: BbcTelevisionReceivedInNewYork-1938; GlimpsesOf1930sGermanliveTelevision; GlimpsesOf1938AmericanliveTelevision.
    There also exists filmed excerpts of pre-war American, British and German tv programs, but they were not recorded directly from a tv receiver like these were.

  • @Rhythmicons
    @Rhythmicons 12 років тому

    Is this film public domain and is it available for download?

  • @aureanR4
    @aureanR4 12 років тому

    hit 1080p for the best colors!

  • @themrparticleman
    @themrparticleman 11 років тому

    you sir, are awesome. it's very rare nowadays you find an even remotely philisophical or intelligent comment. (srry i cnt spl)

  • @Mediagix
    @Mediagix 12 років тому +1

    I don't see the point in the 35mm copy, why not go digital straight away. A good DI & Compositor should be able to fix the colour misalignments as well.

  • @VampyreCake
    @VampyreCake 11 років тому

    I think the same thing about everyone in old films, pictures, etc. What were they like? How did they live? Did they have a good life, or not? It's just too much to think that everyone there is dead and gone.

  • @johneygd
    @johneygd 9 років тому +3

    I guess that when a red filter was placed on the b&w camera, that it causes an chemical reaction on the film diodes,and the same thing with green and blue filters,and once those b&w filtered frames were taken out and scanned in another film at the standard order,with each frame filtered with it's corresponding filter with a light bulb,i guess that it again causes an chemical reaction on the foto diodes of the other film,and that even during digitizing,those shock signal pattern remain in tact,sothat once they were digitally applied with the right filter & combined together,that those colors magically appear to live after 110 years of waiting to be recovered ,but i think his projector could,ve work if he tweaked it in synch with the camera speed.

  • @mickeyindahouse12
    @mickeyindahouse12 5 років тому

    So the first color film isn't from 1902 but 2nd quarter of 1901 and is the knightsbridge of London.

  • @DaveYostCom
    @DaveYostCom 12 років тому

    If he shot all three colors simultaneously, why are there sequential RGB artifacts when there is motion?

  • @kakhak
    @kakhak 12 років тому

    amazing. but maybe there is another similar moving pictures exist somwhere.

  • @johneymute
    @johneymute 9 років тому

    I assume that it is an chemical reactionof those foto diodes,once those pictures were recaptured for a modern projector, each foto was taken from the gate with it's corresponding color filter along with a light bulp,my idea is that this may also work with b&w images because each part of those images shut retain some color traces,so what if we shine a light bulp trough those images to force a chemical reaction in those foto diodes along with 3 rgb color filter one after another,then put those 3 filtered images together to get color,my voice say's that all b&w images,video's have traces of color information left.

  • @atava85
    @atava85 6 років тому

    I apologize if my question sounds silly or has already been answered, but couldn't we restore and use one of Turner's own projectors and then try the original films on that?
    That would make for a more faithful playback of his recordings, I think.

    • @Eyedunno
      @Eyedunno 5 років тому

      You could probably do that, but it wouldn't look as good as what they did, and what they did still works on the same principle as the original system, just with scanning rather than projection. They can combine, for instance, subframes R1/G2/B3 followed by G2/B3/R4, B3/R4/G5, R4/G5/B6 and so on, advancing one subframe and one color at a time for each frame that would have been projected.

    • @debranchelowtone
      @debranchelowtone 2 роки тому

      Film can shrink over time, and projector will tear it into confettis.

  • @Rihodejaneiro
    @Rihodejaneiro 12 років тому

    Nationalmediamuseum. Can u guys somehow to the exactly same film in St Ann's Well Hove and Brighton Pier to seafront. Surely there are more people who wants to see that different how the places changed in 1902 and 2012.
    Sorry about my English

  • @seamonkeys12y
    @seamonkeys12y 7 років тому

    Surely you could of just wound the tape through at a set speed and get the camera to take a photo at the time the frame is centered or record the film going through and use software to automatically/manually cut out any irrelevant parts. Unless this was done before the 1990's then I guess my point is mute.

  • @aquenwisey
    @aquenwisey 12 років тому

    true

  • @troysvisualarts
    @troysvisualarts 12 років тому

    WOW, this is truly amazing to see!!!:D I am a fan of historical colour film n colour television n this is an absolute legendary discovery n very interesting n cool process that is like the predecessor of CBS's field sequential colour TV system of the 40s-50s! Thought I'd mention I've seen on UA-cam another little 3 coloured film from 1903 watch?v=LcIvm0YW_6A what do you's know of that little colour film as the details are a bit sketchy?

  • @Vicvines
    @Vicvines 12 років тому

    the best way to preserve history is to use current technology. solid state drives are replacing hard drives and are made to last a lot longer. if we were to put all of our human history onto them, we could easily preserve them for hundreds of years until better technology comes out.

  • @omarkhanlilcurry
    @omarkhanlilcurry 11 років тому

    sorry bout . was referring to the first person

  • @senorverde09
    @senorverde09 10 років тому

    All early colour films using an additive RGB process (even really early two colour RG films) suffer from colour fringing.

  • @sarpsarp8987
    @sarpsarp8987 Рік тому

    I dont understand how b&w pictures have different colors in themselves with blue, green and red filters.

  • @woowooNeedsFaith
    @woowooNeedsFaith 10 років тому

    The color wheel at 2:57 rotates in the wrong direction...

  • @transitionmusic09
    @transitionmusic09 12 років тому

    Someone should stop those kids bashing that fishtank with sunflowers. They'll stress the carp.

  • @iwasadeum
    @iwasadeum 12 років тому

    Oh my God.
    There, their, and they're are three different words. They cannot be used interchangeably.
    There - location. "Look over there."
    Their - possessive. "That's their dog."
    They're - THEY ARE. "I see very old film footage of children and knowing THEY'RE gone....joy of THEIR childhood."
    For fucks sake, it isn't difficult.
    on the other hand I understand what you think. Watching that amazing WW2 in HD documentary and seeing that almost all those people are now passed on...crazy.

  • @gabyalmazan7581
    @gabyalmazan7581 11 років тому

    the film reminds me of a dream i had

  • @satootto
    @satootto 12 років тому

    驚いた。1901年~1902年と言えば、「映像」というメディアが作られた最初期だ。この時期で既にカラー映像が存在したとは。

  • @Vicvines
    @Vicvines 12 років тому

    yea but with SSDs you can just keep transferring over and over again to new devices easily and quickly and if an SSD goes out it is easier to recover the data than from a HDD

  • @EpicMegaDude
    @EpicMegaDude 12 років тому

    haha! these videos have much better qualities than most UA-cam Videos!.....
    ... these videos obviously weren't recorded with potatoes.

  • @Vicvines
    @Vicvines 12 років тому

    oh i didnt know that

  • @shebotnov
    @shebotnov 12 років тому

    I was talking about dead actors in 2100. And HD is still HD. It wont get WORSE in 2100.

  • @Linkage1992
    @Linkage1992 12 років тому

    You can see the places in Google Street View.

  • @aquenwisey
    @aquenwisey 12 років тому

    vsauce said that there are only 37 people from 1800's in the world

  • @AdurianJ
    @AdurianJ 12 років тому

    I just hope these cute kids didn't end up in the Great War when they where on the verge of adulthood

  • @kruszielski
    @kruszielski 11 років тому

    Probably it had to be copied to 35mm first to be able to use a proper film scanner to digitalize it. Also, The color could be perfectly corrected, however, it would change the results from the original technology. The raw imperfect material is far more important than the content of the movie.

  • @Walkman0007
    @Walkman0007 12 років тому

    amazing
    that would potentially mean there is also color-picture of titanic somewhere?

  • @Linkage1992
    @Linkage1992 12 років тому

    And a whole lot more from 1900, 1901 and 1902.

  • @theprophet20
    @theprophet20 11 років тому

    And did you notice that apparently the little girl died young, in her 25th year in 1920, according to the caption?

  • @johneysupergd7796
    @johneysupergd7796 10 років тому

    Aaah so he placed a color spinning wheel in front of a b&w camera to capture each frame with a red, green and blue filter, HOWEVER any motion will cause rainbow artifacts because of the slow speed camera and color wheel, also projecting the images in real time in full color is NOT easy, because the color filter has to be lined up in sych with fhe same color filter from the camera, sothat each frame will have it's matched color,but requires more tweaking the color projector in nano seconds to get the job done,some has to try it out.

  • @shellyljackson
    @shellyljackson 12 років тому

    No, you are mistaken. There is no possible way that a human being who was alive in 1890 is still living and breathing in 2012. The oldest living person to record lived to 122 years old.

  • @HerecomestheCalavera
    @HerecomestheCalavera 12 років тому

    Thumbs up if you watched this video from 1902 in 1080p!

  • @Linkage1992
    @Linkage1992 12 років тому

    There a a lot of people over the age of 110 you know. A tiny tiny fraction of the population, but still a lot.

  • @cinilaknedalm
    @cinilaknedalm 12 років тому

    It would be awesome if they were to fully restore it: digitally remove the damage and the jerkiness of the video