Phillip Franklin wrote
> In fact National Geographic required all work to
> be submitted on K14 Kodachrome emulsions up until sometime in the
> 1980's. Since they were one of the first color magazine publishers they
> got their start on the early Kodachromes. If you look at some of the
> 1940's issues of this magazine it has the exact quality of color as
> those original Kodachromes.
They also put out a book _Odyssey - The Art of Photography At National
Geographic_, Jane Livingston et. al. (ISBN 0-934738-45-9) which has
examples from all these periods and a technical and artistic discussion
about the different colour film processes. Before Kodachromes, they
used something called autochromes.
> Not surprisingly that color also looked
> like the true process Technicolor used in the movie business.
What modern film has a palette like that? I guess you'd have to do
it digitally.
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