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How To Make Home Movies In Full Color With Cine-Kodak Kodachrome Safety Color Film (1937)

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WHEN you GO ABROAD B ecause of varying climatic conditions encountered, for example, during a cruise, it is particularly important that Kodachrome Film should be processed as soon after expo- sure as possible. This applies, of course, to all film, but particularly to Kodachrome. After exposure and before development, changes sometimes take place in the latent image produced by exposure, and with Koda- chrome Film these changes may impair the quality of the finished film. If you are on a cruise steamer, make ar- rangements to have your exposed but unproc- essed film kept in the ship’s refrigerator until you reach a country having a Kodachrome processing laboratory. Wherever possible it is desirable to store your supply of unexposed Kodachrome Film in the same manner, retain- ing enough for a few days’ use. After storage in a refrigerator, keep the film at room tempera- ture for about 24 hours before opening for use, to avoid condensation of moisture on the film. When refrigeration is not accessible, keep film as cool as possible, and ship the exposed film by the fastest possible means to the near- est laboratory processing Kodachrome Film. If pictures are to be taken in hot, humid localities, where a considerable time must elapse after exposure before the film can be processed, and where refrigeration is not avail- able, Kodachrome Film should not be used. If you are to travel in the tropics, be sure to purchase Kodachrome Film in tropical packing. EASTMAN KODAK COMPANY, Rochester, N. y. 20