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From Dry Plates to Ektachrome Film

  • 1 Godowsky, Leopold Jr

    [br]
    b. 27 May 1900 Chicago, Illinois, USA d. 1983
    [br]
    American musician and photographic experimenter whose researches, with those of his colleague Mannes, led to the introduction of the first commercial tripack colour film, Kodachrome.
    [br]
    Both from distinguished musical families, Godowsky and Leopold Damrosch Mannes met at Riverdale School in New York in 1916, and shared an interest in photography. They began experiments in methods of additive colour photography, gaining a patent for a three-colour projector. Godowsky went to the University of California to study chemistry, physics and mathematics, while working as a professional violinist; Mannes, a pianist, went to Harvard to study music and physics. They kept in touch, and after graduating they joined up in New York, working as musicians and experimenting in colour photography in their spare time.
    Initially working in kitchens and bathrooms, they succeeded in creating a two-layer colour photographic plate, with emulsions separately sensitized to parts of the spectrum, and patented the process. This achievement was all the greater since they were unable to make the emulsions themselves and had to resort to buying commercial photographic plates so that they could scrape off the emulsions, remelt them and coat their experimental materials. In 1922 their work came to the attention of C.E.K. Mees, the leading photographic scientist and Director of the Eastman Kodak Research Laboratory in Rochester, New York. Mees arranged for plates to be coated to their specifications. With a grant from Kuhn, Loeb \& Co. they were able to rent laboratory space. Learning of Rudolf Fischer's early work on dye couplers, they worked to develop a new process incorporating them. Mees saw that their work, however promising, would not develop in an amateur laboratory, and in 1930 he invited them to join the Kodak Research Laboratory, where they arrived on 15 June 1931. Their new colleagues worked on ways of coating multi-layer film, while Mannes and Godowsky worked out a method of separately processing the individual layers in the exposed film. The result was Kodachrome film, the first of the modern integral tripack films, launched on 15 April 1935.
    They remained with Eastman Kodak until December 1939; their work contributed to the later appearance of Ektachrome colour-reversal film and the Kodacolor and Eastman Color negative-positive colour processes. Mannes became the Director of his father's Music Academy in New York, remaining as such until his death in 1964. Godowsky returned to Westport, Connecticut, and continued to study mathematics at Columbia University. He carried out photographic research un his private laboratory up until the time of his death in 1983.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    C.E.K.Mees, 1961, From Dry Plates to Ektachrome Film, New York.
    BC

    Biographical history of technology > Godowsky, Leopold Jr

  • 2 Wratten, Frederick Charles Luther

    [br]
    b. 1840 England
    d. 8 April 1926 London, England
    [br]
    English inventor and manufacturer, founder of one of the first successful gelatine dry-plate companies.
    [br]
    He started his working life as a schoolteacher, but in his early twenties he moved to London to become a clerk with a photographic wholesaler, Soloman. There Wratten became interested in photography, and on the announcement of the new gelatine dry-plate processes he began to conduct his own experiments. In 1876 he devised a means of drying gelatine emulsions and removing excess silver with alcohol, and published details in 1877 and 1878. It was during this period that he formed a partnership with Henry Wainwright to manufacture and sell photographic materials. The mass production of gelatine dry plates was a British invention and monopoly, and the new firm of Wratten \& Wainwright was one of the first in the field and soon proved to be amongst the most successful. The business exported extensively to Europe, introducing a succession of plates of increasing sensitivity. Wratten continued to trade under the same name when his partner Wainwright died in 1882. His success continued, and in 1890 he moved the company to a newly equipped factory in Croydon, near London. Six years later Wratten incorporated as co-owners of the business his son, S.H.Wainwright and a young graduate from London University, C.E.Kenneth Mees. The newly constituted company soon introduced the first British panchromatic plates and filters. The introduction of Lumiere's Autochrome plates in 1907 prompted Wratten and Mees to take out a patent on a colour screen plate process of their own. The company also found work coating plates for other similar innovations. In 1912 the business was finally sold to George Eastman and Wratten and Mees joined Kodak Ltd at Harrow.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    Wratten's early work on the action of alcohol on gelatine emulsions was described in a series of articles: 1877, Photographic News: 390, 49.
    1878, Photographic News: 121–3.
    1878, British Journal of Photography: 124–5.
    Further Reading
    E.J.Wall, 1925, Three Colour Photography.
    C.E.K.Mees, 1961, From Dry Plates to Ektachrome Film, New York.
    JW

    Biographical history of technology > Wratten, Frederick Charles Luther

  • 3 Mees, Charles Edward Kenneth

    [br]
    b. 1882 Wellingborough, England
    d. 1960 USA
    [br]
    Anglo-American photographic scientist and Director of Research at the Kodak Research Laboratory.
    [br]
    The son of a Wesleyan minister, Mees was interested in chemistry from an early age and studied at St Dunstan's College in Catford, where he met Samuel E.Sheppard, with whom he went on to University College London in 1900. They worked together on a thesis for BSc degrees in 1903, developing the work begun by Hurter and Driffield on photographic sensitometry. This and other research papers were published in 1907 in the book Investigations on the Theory of the Photographic Process, which became a standard reference work. After obtaining a doctorate in 1906, Mees joined the firm of Wratten \& Wainwright (see F.C.L.Wratten), manufacturers of dry plates in Croydon; he started work on 1 April 1906, first tackling the problem of manufacturing colour-sensitive emulsions and enabling the company to market the first fully panchromatic plates from the end of that year.
    During the next few years Mees ran the commercial operation of the company as Managing Director and carried out research into new products, including filters for use with the new emulsions. In January 1912 he was visited by George Eastman, the American photographic manufacturer, who asked him to go to Rochester, New York, and set up a photographic research laboratory in the Kodak factory there. Wratten was prepared to release Mees on condition that Eastman bought the company; thus, Wratten and Wainwright became part of Kodak Ltd, and Mees left for America. He supervised the construction of a building in the heart of Kodak Park, and the building was fully equipped not only as a research laboratory, but also with facilities for coating and packing sensitized materials. It also had the most comprehensive library of photographic books in the world. Work at the laboratory started at the beginning of 1913, with a staff of twenty recruited from America and England, including Mees's collaborator of earlier years, Sheppard. Under Mees's direction there flowed from the Kodak research Laboratory a constant stream of discoveries, many of them leading to new products. Among these were the 16 mm amateur film-making system launched in 1923; the first amateur colour-movie system, Kodacolor, in 1928; and 8 mm home movies, in 1932. His support for the young experimenters Mannes and Godowsky, who were working on colour photography, led to their joining the Research Laboratory and to the introduction of the first multi-layer colour film, Kodachrome, in 1935. Eastman had agreed from the beginning that as much of the laboratory's work as possible should be published, and Mees himself wrote prolifically, publishing over 200 articles and ten books. While he made significant contributions to the understanding of the photographic process, particularly through his early research, it is his creation and organization of the Kodak Research Laboratory that is his lasting memorial. His interests were many and varied, including Egyptology, astronomy, marine biology and history. He was a Fellow of the Royal Society.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    FRS.
    Bibliography
    1961, From Dry Plates to Ektachrome Film, New York (partly autobiographical).
    BC

    Biographical history of technology > Mees, Charles Edward Kenneth

См. также в других словарях:

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  • 24x36 — Format 35 mm Description d’un film 35 mm ; « côté projecteur » suppose un projecteur à chargement à droite (en regardant la salle), ce qui est le cas général Le format 35 mm est un standard de pellicule photographique d… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • 24×36 — Format 35 mm Description d’un film 35 mm ; « côté projecteur » suppose un projecteur à chargement à droite (en regardant la salle), ce qui est le cas général Le format 35 mm est un standard de pellicule photographique d… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • 35 mm — Format 35 mm Description d’un film 35 mm ; « côté projecteur » suppose un projecteur à chargement à droite (en regardant la salle), ce qui est le cas général Le format 35 mm est un standard de pellicule photographique d… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • 35 mm (photographie) — Format 35 mm Description d’un film 35 mm ; « côté projecteur » suppose un projecteur à chargement à droite (en regardant la salle), ce qui est le cas général Le format 35 mm est un standard de pellicule photographique d… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • 35mm — Format 35 mm Description d’un film 35 mm ; « côté projecteur » suppose un projecteur à chargement à droite (en regardant la salle), ce qui est le cas général Le format 35 mm est un standard de pellicule photographique d… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Format 35 Mm — Description d’un film 35 mm ; « côté projecteur » suppose un projecteur à chargement à droite (en regardant la salle), ce qui est le cas général Le format 35 mm est un standard de pellicule photographique d une largeur de …   Wikipédia en Français

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