Ace St.John
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Posts: 139
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Post by Ace St.John on Jun 25, 2016 19:12:20 GMT
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Post by thomgray on Jun 26, 2016 6:48:34 GMT
Sounds fantastic
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Post by Jon Preddle on Jun 26, 2016 22:06:50 GMT
All the 1960s Doctor Who episodes were made in colour.
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Ace St.John
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Posts: 139
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Post by Ace St.John on Jun 26, 2016 22:18:52 GMT
All the 1960s Doctor Who episodes were made in colour. Thats what I hoped
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Post by markboulton on Jun 26, 2016 23:20:58 GMT
What, as in, they didn't have Bill Oddie going around painting everyone with black paint and white paint, and telling everybody to keep quiet?!?!
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Ace St.John
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Posts: 139
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Post by Ace St.John on Jun 26, 2016 23:50:32 GMT
Could there be some kind of frequency or electronic patterning originaly created by the different colours of light received by the black&whitse television cameras that can be decoded by computer software? Thus finding colour info in a b&w video taped image. Or even computer recognition of tonal variances to identify colour tone & then computerised colourization frame by frame.
Or what of monochrome celluloid film used to film many sequences in1960s Dr.Who. Could the silver halides on black & white film negative have information relating to the colour temperatures or colour frequencies of light that struck the salts that could be ananlysed under electron microscope to restore/transform a monochrome film intoto colour?
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Post by Jaspal Cheema on Jun 27, 2016 8:59:56 GMT
All the 1960s Doctor Who episodes were made in colour. It's just that we couldn't see it...!
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RWels
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Post by RWels on Jun 27, 2016 9:36:39 GMT
All the 1960s Doctor Who episodes were made in colour. It's just that we couldn't see it...! Because of EU regulations. But now that the UK's finally free... Note. This post is a joke and nothing but a joke.
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Post by markboulton on Jul 24, 2016 16:52:12 GMT
Could there be some kind of frequency or electronic patterning originaly created by the different colours of light received by the black&whitse television cameras that can be decoded by computer software? Thus finding colour info in a b&w video taped image. Or even computer recognition of tonal variances to identify colour tone & then computerised colourization frame by frame. Or what of monochrome celluloid film used to film many sequences in1960s Dr.Who. Could the silver halides on black & white film negative have information relating to the colour temperatures or colour frequencies of light that struck the salts that could be ananlysed under electron microscope to restore/transform a monochrome film intoto colour? First one, impossible. Second one, I actually think may be possible in the future. I've often considered the crystal configuration might be mappable in the future.
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Post by brianfretwell on Jul 24, 2016 17:09:40 GMT
All the 1960s Doctor Who episodes were made in colour. It's just that we couldn't see it...! And they were 405 line NTSC so Colour (Color?) recovery from chroma dots won't work :-)
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