Top (left): Laying out flower exhibits in the Horticultural grounds, London, for exhibition at the flower show held last month. These flowers, which came from South Africa, were specially packed in the vegetable coolers of the liner which carried them to England. Right: His Royal Highness Prince George at one of the gramophone factories at Hayes, Middlesex, last month, when lie made an inspection. Below (left): A bird’s-eye view of Dresden-on-the-Elbe, Germany. This is a fine town and admired by visitors to that part of the world. Right: Two technicians in cinematography, Mr D. Daponte and Mr S. J. Cox, who have perfected a simplified method of taking and projecting cinematograph film in colour. With ordinary apparatus fitted with their special cinecolour lenses and using ordinary standard film, the pictures are taken and produced in black and white in the usual way and, when thrown on th*e screen through the cinecolour lens on the projector, produce the images in their natural colours. The men are shown here with a camera fitted with the cinecolour lens.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TS19331202.2.170.1
Bibliographic details
Star (Christchurch), Volume LXIV, Issue 934, 2 December 1933, Page 21 (Supplement)
Word Count
175Top (left): Laying out flower exhibits in the Horticultural grounds, London, for exhibition at the flower show held last month. These flowers, which came from South Africa, were specially packed in the vegetable coolers of the liner which carried them to England. Right: His Royal Highness Prince George at one of the gramophone factories at Hayes, Middlesex, last month, when lie made an inspection. Below (left): A bird’s-eye view of Dresden-on-the-Elbe, Germany. This is a fine town and admired by visitors to that part of the world. Right: Two technicians in cinematography, Mr D. Daponte and Mr S. J. Cox, who have perfected a simplified method of taking and projecting cinematograph film in colour. With ordinary apparatus fitted with their special cinecolour lenses and using ordinary standard film, the pictures are taken and produced in black and white in the usual way and, when thrown on th*e screen through the cinecolour lens on the projector, produce the images in their natural colours. The men are shown here with a camera fitted with the cinecolour lens. Star (Christchurch), Volume LXIV, Issue 934, 2 December 1933, Page 21 (Supplement)
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