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Word: kalmuses (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Effron '36, W. R. Felmeth 1FG., J. G. Gilkey, Jr. '39, W. F. Grimes '38, R. Hamill '38, T. W. Hardy, Jr. '37, D. E. Humez '39, P. R. Humes '38, C. Huntington 1G., G. S. Ierardi '39, L. S. Johnson, '39, A. H. Kalmus '39, R. H. Kutz '39, P. H. Lee '37, W. B. Miller '39, F. C. Minkler, Jr., '39, J. S. Morgan '39, P. W.Morse 38, A. P. O'Kelly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SIXTY-TWO MEN CHOSEN FOR GLEE CLUB POSTS | 5/21/1936 | See Source »

...negatives, one to record reds and yellows, the other to record blues and greens. The chief faults in this process were that it blurred all outlines, failed to register either pure blue or pure yellow and had a range limited to garish greens and oranges. By 1932, Dr. Kalmus had a new process based on a camera which split light through a three-sided prism onto three negatives (red, blue and yellow), which recorded all the colors of the rainbow with fidelity. By this time the only producer who would listen to him was Walt Disney, whose Silly Symphonies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Whitney Colors | 5/27/1935 | See Source »

Technicolor is the trade name of a process invented by Dr. Herbert Thomas Kalmus, onetime (1913-15) professor of electro-chemistry and metallurgy at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, now president of a $35,000,000 corporation. Dr. Kalmus built his first camera ten years ago. It took 15 months to build and cost $120,000. Technicolor cameras are cheaper now, but there are not many of them available ; a year ago there were only eight in the world. Technicolor, Inc. owns exclusive rights to its process - not the best process yet discovered for taking pictures in color, but the only...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: At Grauman's Chinese | 1/27/1930 | See Source »

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