Illustrations depict the Kinemacolor camera and projector with two rotating filters in red and green and the working principle of the additive Kinemacolor process.
In the video, fig. 5, the color fringing in motion becomes visible.
Sources:
David Cleveland’s and Brian Pritchard‘s reconstruction of a Kinemacolor projector.
Coote, Jack H. (1993): The Illustrated History of Colour Photography. Surbiton, Surrey: Fountain Press.
Urban, Charles (1910): Kinemacolor. Handbook. London: The Natural Color Kinematograph Company Ltd.
Video: Cineteca di Bologna.
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Kinemacolor projector used for David Cleveland’s and Brian Pritchard’s reconstruction. Credit: Brian Pritchard.
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„A schematic series showing how the two-colour Kinemacolor additive motion picture process operated“. Source: Coote, Jack H. (1993): The Illustrated History of Colour Photography. Surbiton, Surrey: Fountain Press.
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Original design of the camera. Source: Urban, Charles (1910): Kinemacolor. Handbook. London: The Natural Color Kinematograph Company Ltd.
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Original design of the projector. Source: Urban, Charles (1910): Kinemacolor. Handbook. London: The Natural Color Kinematograph Company Ltd.
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Credit: Cineteca di Bologna. Film: Banks of the Nile (1911).