In May, archivist David Cleveland and I put on a 35mm show for the reopening of the Electric Palace, Harwich, which dates from 1911, using my 1913 Gaumont Chrono projector. I was back up there yesterday. It was the 111th anniversary of the Palace's opening. With David Cleveland and projector restorer Nigel Lister, we set up a 1919 Ernemann machine that Nigel had converted to run Kinemacolor, and did a test. We hope to put on a proper show that way sometime in the new year. Here are some of the photos.
The amazing thing is that the print itself is black and white. Only upon projection are the colours reapplied, exactly as shot by the camera, which uses an identical colour wheel.
The system runs at 32fps. Nigel had altered the gearing of the machine so that one turn of the crank transports 16 frames instead of the usual 8, so you crank at 2 turns per second.
David and historian Brian Pritchard did a huge amount of work to bring back Kinemacolor for the centenary in 2008, when these prints were made. The original projector they used had to be returned to a museum, which is why Nigel set out to modify this machine for the format. It was a huge privilege to be part of this yesterday.
The amazing thing is that the print itself is black and white. Only upon projection are the colours reapplied, exactly as shot by the camera, which uses an identical colour wheel.
The system runs at 32fps. Nigel had altered the gearing of the machine so that one turn of the crank transports 16 frames instead of the usual 8, so you crank at 2 turns per second.
David and historian Brian Pritchard did a huge amount of work to bring back Kinemacolor for the centenary in 2008, when these prints were made. The original projector they used had to be returned to a museum, which is why Nigel set out to modify this machine for the format. It was a huge privilege to be part of this yesterday.
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