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Initially in 1960 this was a partly colour film; length wise 85% black & white and 15% coloured. In 2004 this was technically redeveloped as complete colour film.
Her hair was black in the Disney Film.
The 1949 film 'Little Women' was filmed in Technicolor .
Wow, surprised this hasn't been answered. The answer is defiantly not. Colour film has a much lower latitude. Off the top of my head (trying to remember back) slide colour only has a latitude of about 3 stops (depending on film). That is what gives it that great colour contrast for fashion and commercial photos but difficult exposures. Colour print film is about 4-5 stops (depending on film). Black and white depends on the film but I recall 9 stops being possible. I've pushed B&W film 6 stops and it was still quite usable. I've pushed colour film 3 stops and it was mediocre, however, it was a low end film.
Black
You can develop black and white film at a photography lab, a darkroom, or a specialized film processing service.
well you can use black and white film and develop them using a regular camera. basically just load your camera with black and white film if it is that kind of camera.
The first black and white film was the very first film ever made: Roundhay Garden Scene
Mughal-E-Azam a classic film of 1960, which was a partly coloured film was technicallly redeveloped as complete colour film and again released in 2004.
Yes.
No, color negative film is not black and white. It is designed to capture and reproduce colors in a negative image format.
The first James Bond film to be released in color was 1962's Dr. No. The only James Bond film to have been made in black and white was the 1954 television special Casino Royale on Climax!.