Classic movie site with rare images, original ads, and behind-the-scenes photos, with informative and insightful commentary. We like to have fun with movies!
Monday, April 24, 2006
They Photographed Nicely In Color Too
I’m no expert in color photography, but I know what I like. These images from various mid-thirties publications fairly leaped off the page toward me. I was resolved to share them here, and promise there will be many more to come. I’m told that three-color photography really started to come into it’s own around 1935, and this was about the time Hollywood began to embrace color as a means of publicizing stars and the movies featuring them. Fan magazines were slower to incorporate color. It was an expensive feature for otherwise cheap publications, but what a thrill it must have been for Photoplay readers to open a 1939 issue and find Bette Davis in a full-color fashion lay-out, or Kay Francis, or Merle Oberon. A lot of magazine purchases were probably inspired by a glimpse of these striking figures. By the forties, color was much more commonplace, but never common. Studios competed to provide the most stunning muti-hued portraits for insatiable collectors to paste in their scrapbooks. Here is but a sampling, but rest assured, we’ll be back with more of them!
What a stunning photograph of Bette Davis.
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to see more :)
What a funny thing. I just saw the movie Trouble in Paradise with ----Kay Francis. The last photo is Kay isn't it? Anyway, that movie was great! Very funny. I recommend it to anyone.
ReplyDeleteI have to agree great photo of Bette.
ReplyDelete