Home Movies (1944)

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Kodacolor Snapshots with your ordinary camera even with a Brownie . . . with Kodacolor Film you get full-color prints on paper Kodak research brinqs you 5 different ways to make pictures in tffofof Perfected over many years . . . available now There's nothing "experimental" about Kodak full-color films —the most important research was done before 1935, when Kodachrome home movie film was first offered. Of course there have been great improvements and new developments—notably Kodacolor Film, produced in limited amount just before Pearl Harbor. It was never given much publicity, for it led to full-color aerial film, a military tool of major importance. Our armed forces needed almost all we could make. However, even now, Kodacolor and Kodachrome Films are on the market, though sometimes hard to find. With them you can make all 5 different kinds of full-color pictures shown here. EASTMAN KODAK COMPANY, Rochester, n. y. REMEMBER TARAWA?— how a shifting wind grounded our boats 800 yards from shore, under a withering fire — and how in that watery hell our men taught the Japs that Americans, too, know how to die? The Marines' 961 dead offer a stem example for us at home. BUY MORE WAR BONDS Serving human progre through photography Kodachrome Movies with your 8-mm. or 16-mm. movie camera . . . Kotavachrome Prints . . . extra large fullcolor enlargements made from Kodachrome Sheet Film