I posted a link in another thread regarding the color Ernie Kovacs sketch excerpt that NBC presented as part of their 60th anniversary broadcast; I think that its existence raises some other issues that folks here may be interested in.
The show aired in 1957 in color, and was apparently recorded for posterity using a lenticular kinescope process, which preserved the color information while allowing for fast development using black-and-white processing. The result looks like a black-and-white piece of film; color is retrieved by projecting light through the film at different angles, and then refocusing the three light paths on a single display. The trade-off is brightness; the resulting product is much darker than the original.
The segment NBC ran in 1976 was projected using the technology of the time, and that segment recently made its way to YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lEBg6ansaJA
As you can see in the clip, it was a pretty murky presentation; it may even have been murky on the original west-coast playback.
It seems to me that the technical issues posed by using the lenticular kinescope source could be offset by digital restoration, between simple contrast and gamma correction and the kind of fine kinescope-to-video restoration done by LiveFeed, who seem a bit proprietary about their process, but whose results at restoring the live video "pop" to kinescope playback are pretty clearly impressive:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fen4NN99_xs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZ7ND1o2OJA
(There may be other kinescope-to-video-quality restorers out there as well; I happen to know about that one and was impressed by their YouTube samples. The people doing the BW kinnie-to-color Doctor Who restorations using dot crawl patterns are another good example.)
It was the Kovacs special that led me to the awareness of lenticular kinescope, which at least provides a reliable guide to color restoration, and the above is part of my suggestion to the people at The Criterion Collection suggesting that they take it on, but it got me to thinking...do you suppose there's more color television from the mid-to-late 50's saved on lenticular kinescope that could be resurrected by these means?
The show aired in 1957 in color, and was apparently recorded for posterity using a lenticular kinescope process, which preserved the color information while allowing for fast development using black-and-white processing. The result looks like a black-and-white piece of film; color is retrieved by projecting light through the film at different angles, and then refocusing the three light paths on a single display. The trade-off is brightness; the resulting product is much darker than the original.
The segment NBC ran in 1976 was projected using the technology of the time, and that segment recently made its way to YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lEBg6ansaJA
As you can see in the clip, it was a pretty murky presentation; it may even have been murky on the original west-coast playback.
It seems to me that the technical issues posed by using the lenticular kinescope source could be offset by digital restoration, between simple contrast and gamma correction and the kind of fine kinescope-to-video restoration done by LiveFeed, who seem a bit proprietary about their process, but whose results at restoring the live video "pop" to kinescope playback are pretty clearly impressive:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fen4NN99_xs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZ7ND1o2OJA
(There may be other kinescope-to-video-quality restorers out there as well; I happen to know about that one and was impressed by their YouTube samples. The people doing the BW kinnie-to-color Doctor Who restorations using dot crawl patterns are another good example.)
It was the Kovacs special that led me to the awareness of lenticular kinescope, which at least provides a reliable guide to color restoration, and the above is part of my suggestion to the people at The Criterion Collection suggesting that they take it on, but it got me to thinking...do you suppose there's more color television from the mid-to-late 50's saved on lenticular kinescope that could be resurrected by these means?