-
commercial processes based on the use of
duplitized film
differed significantly.
Large sheets of
duplitized film were
sometimes used for
medical X-ray...
-
became commercially practical in the
early 1910s when
Kodak introduced duplitized film
print stock,
which facilitated making two-color prints.
Bipack photography...
-
camera face to face. Each
negative was
printed on one
surface of the same
duplitized print stock and each
resulting series of black-and-white
images was chemically...
- were
printed onto the
front and back of one
strip of black-and-white
duplitized film.
After development, the
resulting silver images were
bleached away...
- were
developed and the orange-red dye removed. The
prints were made on
duplitized film and
developed as
black and
white positives. One side
containing the...
-
developed by John
Capstaff at the
research lab.
Another two-color film
duplitized film was
marketed for
photography of X-rays as it had a
short exposure...
-
panchromatic film), and the other, blue (orthochromatic). In printing,
duplitized stock is
exposed and
processed with one
record on each side. In a tank...
- handedness, but as the two
negatives were
often contact-printed onto one
duplitized film for
subsequent color-toning, as in the
Prizma process, this often...
-
other to blue-green (cyan). Both
negatives were
processed and
printed on
duplitized film, and then each
emulsion was
toned its
complementary color, red or...
- film
being sensitized to red and blue. Both
negatives were
processed on
duplitized film, much like Trucolor's
rival process Cinecolor.
Unlike Cinecolor,...