Ruby Red, of course.
In the 1939 movie version, Dorothy eventually wakes up in Kansas again, and Oz was just a dream, and so were the ruby slippers. So I guess, you would find them in your sleep.
The 1925 version was in black and white . The 1939 version was filmed in both sepia tone and color.
The Ruby Slippers were worn first by the Wicked Witch of the East and then by Dorothy Gale, in the 1939 film version of The Wizard of Oz. In the original book, and in the 1902/1903 stage version, by author and Oz series originator Lyman Frank Baum [May 15, 1856-May 5, 1919], the shoes are Silver Slippers. But those involved in the making of the film found the silver to wash out in comparison to the riotous colors in their Technicolor production. And so red was the color of choice.
Ruby red
Smithsonian
In the movie, red ruby slippers. In the books, silver slippers.
Dorothy's slippers were ruby red colored.
ruby red
The famous ruby slippers are featured in the famous hit movie The Wizard of Oz. The ruby slippers are worn by the film's heroine, Dorothy Gale who was played by Judy Garland in the MGM version of the film.
The Slippers were Silver in the original 1900 book and 1902/1903 stage versions, and Ruby in the 1939 film version.
Judy Garland
MGM believed ruby slippers would look more dramatic in Technicolor than silver slippers, as mentioned in the book.
The words 'ruby slippers' is a noun phrase, made up of the common noun 'slippers' described by the adjective 'ruby'.
In the 1939 movie version, Dorothy eventually wakes up in Kansas again, and Oz was just a dream, and so were the ruby slippers. So I guess, you would find them in your sleep.
The original book and stage versions had the slippers silver, the 1939 film version ruby. For the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film producers decided that the silver color looked washed out in Technicolor. So they changed to the more photogenic ruby for the slippers' color.
The 1925 version was in black and white . The 1939 version was filmed in both sepia tone and color.
Ruby red