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14— NOVEMBER, 1937
(Camera— Cont.)
INTERNATIONAL
• Watches, Diamonds and Jewelry on Credit
*BES
Ui
[iSptJS
ONOINESi
Internationally and Nationally Known
LONCINES, CRUEN, HAMILTON and ELGIN
Watches — Finest Quality obtainable.
L^ Jit
Buy your diamonds and watches from Mr. Isaac Kushner who operates under the firm name of
KUSHNER DIAMOND CO.
Mr. Kushner has been connected with the labor movement practically all of his life and at one time was a Labor Organizer.
Should it be impossible for you to call at his display room at 707 South Broadway, Room 320, a telephone call will bring you a salesman, either at your place of employment or at your home.
KUSHNER DIAMOND CO.
707 South Broadway
Room 320, Loew's State Building
LOS ANGELES
VA-5620
• Featuring the
LO KG IN E S
THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED WATCH
Wanted to buy fob spot CASH
CAMERAS
MITCHELL • 6€LL & HOW6LL €Y€M0oD€8RI€°AKeL€Yetc
AeeessoRies
LABORATORY ANO CUTTING ROOM €QUIP/V\€NT
(PmerA Equipments
^JB> 1600 B'WAY n.y.c\ CIrcle 65O80
TOP. Speed Graphic shot by Wally Wallace on Technicolor set lit with arcs.
Picture was snapped without flash bulbs during; scene rehearsal. BOTTOM. Biack
and-white print of a Duf'aycolor still from same picture.
Color Fix Stills
Speed Graphic gets fine action shots with Technicolor arc ights.
Wally Wallace, veteran stillman member of Local 659, is enthusiastic over use of the 4x5-inch Speed Graphic with low-key set lighting; used by James Wong Howe for Selznick International's Technicolor production of "Tom Sawyer." Wallace used a Speed Graphic without flash bulbs shooting natural instead of posed action shots by snapping rehearsals, which were lit with the arcs used for Technicolor. "The type of lighting has a very fine balance
and is nicely distributed," Wallace says, "and stillmen will make no mistake in mixing the Speed Graphic with the 'eight by ten' for story action shots."
Results obtained from Dufaycolor, of which he and Fred Parrish shot a considerable amount on several recent S-I productions, also are encouraging. Wallace reports. A black-and-white print of one of the Dufays from "Tom Sawyer," illustrated herewith, was particularly interesting in the manner in which the bothersome magenta was kept under control. Dufay and Kodachrome are much in demand by newspapers and magazines.