Polacolor

Polacolor was the trade name of two very different color photography products developed by the Polaroid Corporation.

Motion picture print process

The first Polacolor was a post-World War II process for making 35mm color motion picture prints for theatrical use. It was a three-color dye coupler process that produced full-color images in a single photographic emulsion. As an alternative to the dominant Technicolor printing process, Polacolor had advantages over the contemporary Cinecolor process, which yielded two-color prints that reproduced only a limited range of colors and had the two component dye images in separate emulsions on the front and back of the film base.

While Polacolor did not see much use past short subjects and advertisements, Paramount Pictures used it in the following Famous Studios series:

Screen Songs Cartoons: The Circus Comes to Clown, Base Brawl, Little Brown Jug, Winter Draws On, Sing or Swim, Camptown Races, The Lone Star State, Readin', Ritin' and Rhythmetic, The Funshine State, The Emerald Isle, Comin' Round the Mountain, The Stork Market, Spring Song and The Ski's the Limit

Popeye Cartoons: Wigwam Whoopee, Pre-Hysterical Man, Popeye Meets Hercules, A Wolf in Sheik's Clothing, Snow Place Like Home, Robin Hood-Winked, Symphony in Spinach, Lumberjack and Jill and Hot Air Aces

Noveltoon Cartoons: Flip Flap

The process was not very successful, and Polaroid discontinued it around 1950.

Instant still photography process

The second and far better-known Polacolor was an instant film product introduced in 1963 for use in Polaroid instant cameras for still photography. It produced small one-off color prints on paper.

Sources

  • Four Aspects of the Film by James L. Limbacher. 1968.
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See also

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