DeLuxe_Color

DeLuxe Color

DeLuxe Color

Color film process


DeLuxe Color[1] or Deluxe color or Color by DeLuxe[2] is Deluxe Laboratories' brand of color process for motion pictures. DeLuxe Color is Eastmancolor-based, with certain adaptations for improved compositing for printing (similar to Technicolor's "selective printing") and for mass-production of prints. Eastmancolor, first introduced in 1950, was one of the first widely-successful "single strip color" processes, and eventually displaced three-strip Technicolor.[3]

Color by DeLuxe (sometimes with a space before the L) became a popular, vivid and stable process for filmed color television series from the mid 1960s, especially by 20th Century-Fox Television studios.

DeLuxe also offers "Showprints" (usually supplied to premieres in Los Angeles and New York).[4] "Showprint" is DeLuxe's proprietary name for an "EK" (for "Eastman Kodak"), the generic name for a release print made directly from the original camera negative instead of from an internegative.[5][6]

See also


References

  1. Gallagher, Tag (July 2002). "Raoul Walsh". Senses of Cinema. Retrieved July 17, 2022.
  2. "Dead Sea Cast & Credits". in 70mm. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
  3. Giardina, Carolyn (March 13, 2007). "Fox processes Deluxe Labs deal". The Hollywood Reporter. Associated Press. Retrieved July 17, 2022.
  4. Giardina, Carolyn (March 6, 2014). "Deluxe's Hollywood Film Lab to Close May 9". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved July 17, 2022.

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