[…] as they called it, but it was still not a negative positive process, it was still a reversal film, it was Kodachrome really. It was made for them by Kodak. It wasn't made by Technicolor. Then they broke it down into three negatives and then used their own printing process. It wasn't very good. It w[…]
[…]t it, but it was up to the cameraman to decide what he wanted. Plus-X [Plus-6 ?] which was black-and-white film 30ASA I think. Then there was another Kodak film , black-and white one, which was 60, but I could cho ose what film I wanted, and I went for the fast one, if I was doing night exteriors, […]
[…]y just a couple of weeks ago and was named museum of the year, and now building, they're growing, and the big hump for them is they've been given the Kodak collection, and they're getting that into a new gallery, which will open in April, and thereafter they'll have more time to spend, but I like th[…]
[…] , Â Producer UEA/LW /AHRCH WBF&T V 259 Leslie J Kodak , Â MGM , Â BBC , Â Fuji […]
[…] and Todd -ao UK . Paul began his career at Kodak, then became Technical Manager at Kays/Metrocolor London where he […]
[…] very well, but nobody’s going to manufacture film any more. Kodak have stopped doing a lot of film now. 35 […]
[…] not necessarily the cans, the film s ometimes went in Kodak boxes and all kinds of things, all different shapes […]
[…] we used to have to do with films, it was Kodak film, we used to have to buy it in […]
[…] got into Transport Command. And it was then, behind the Kodak factory at Harrow, Wealdstone I used to go out […]
[…] through the hoops on credit rating and things like that. Kodak decided to give a private guarantee for instance. L.P. […]