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Journal of e-Media Studies, Volume 7 Issue 1: Early Cinema History (Understanding Visual Culture Through Silent Film Collections)

Streible Endnote 15

Joshua Yumibe, Moving Color: Early Film, Mass Culture, Modernism (Rutgers University Press, 2012), 78–80. See also Richard Abel, The Red Rooster Scare: Making Cinema American, 1900–1910 (University of California Press, 1999), 47. See especially “Pathécolor, Pathéchrome, stencil coloring,” Timeline of Historical Film Colors. filmcolors.org/timeline-entry/1218. This includes Barbara Flueckiger’s photographs of five frames from MoMA’s nitrate print of Three American Beauties, as well as my 2017 video comparing MoMA’s digital release versions transferred at fourteen versus sixteen frames per second. (See Three American Beauties (1906) speed comparison at archive.org/details/3ABx2x.) The video illustrates one of my three essays about researching early cinema, for which I used Three American Beauties as a case study. All are found on my NYU Film Historiography blog, wp.nyu.edu/filmhist, posted in 2017: Dan Streible, “Researching Early Cinema As Media Archaeology,” February 13; “Addendum to Three American Beauties,” February 15; and “More Beauties of Early Cinema; or, Show Me a Rose,” March 14.

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