Dufay Transparencies
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- Part Of
- Bert Riggall fonds
- Scope & Content
- File consists of 178 Dufaycolor colour transparencies, some captioned. Transparencies in this file pertain to views of Beehive Mountain and the Great Divide, wildflowers (shooting stars or dodecatheon conjugens, alpine delphinium, thermopsis rhombifilia, harebell, campanula or bell flower, delphini…
- Date Range
- [ca.1939, 1940, 1941]
- Reference Code
- V26 / III / D1 / NS - 328 to 485
- Description Level
- 5 / File
- Part Of
- Bert Riggall fonds
- Description Level
- 5 / File
- Series
- III. Professional Photography: Transparencies
- Reference Code
- V26 / III / D1 / NS - 328 to 485
- Date Range
- [ca.1939, 1940, 1941]
- Physical Description
- Transparencies: 178 Dufaycolor transparencies, colour
- History / Biographical
- Dufay Historical Significance: Dufaycolor is an additive colour photographic film process invented by Louis Dufay and introduced for still photography in 1935. Popular with amateurs and professional photographers, it was used for photojournalism and advertising purposes. Dufaycolor was used only into the 1950s when it was superseded by superior colour processes like Technicolour and Kodachrome. Dufaycolor transparencies are viewed either by projection or transmitted light. The photographer could use Dufaycolor roll film (35mm) or ‘flat film’ in preloaded ‘film packs’ for larger sizes. Dufaycolor transparencies are often mounted in a Dufaycolor slide mount, a black paper mount embossed with “Dufaycolor” on the top right hand corner. Riggall’s use of Dufaycolor is significant because of the limited commercial production (1935 - 1950), the economic implications of using Dufaycolor (Dufaycolor film could be nearly three times the price of other commercially available film stock), and Riggall’s own limited use of this format (ca. 1939 to 1941). The 486 Dufaycolor transparencies contained within the Bert Riggall fonds are important records of early color photography and Riggall’s experimentation with the process. Riggall ordered his Dufaycolor supplies from “Dufaycolor Service” and the W.E. Booth Company Limited in Toronto. Also in the Bert Riggall fonds, is “The Dufaycolor Book” published by Dufay-Chromex Limited found at: M376 / 126, 127
- Scope & Content
- File consists of 178 Dufaycolor colour transparencies, some captioned. Transparencies in this file pertain to views of Beehive Mountain and the Great Divide, wildflowers (shooting stars or dodecatheon conjugens, alpine delphinium, thermopsis rhombifilia, harebell, campanula or bell flower, delphinium brownii, alpine aster, willow herb, erythronium, trollius, alpine saxifrage), trail rides, mountain views, Red Rock Canyon warden cabin, Bert Riggall's car, bighorn sheep, pack trains, Riggall's Cottonwood Canyon home, and various unidentified views, camps and camp life, a sunset by a river, trail rides, pack trains, hiking, horses grazing, riders on a mountain ridge, three transparencies of Riggall's brother Jabez Allan Riggall, and an interior view of the Riggall home.
- Subject Access
- Dufay, Wildflowers, Pack trains, Mountains, hiking
- Title Source
- Title based on contents of file
- Content Details
- Some of the transparencies have maintained their original dufaycolor mounts. Some mounts are also captioned with exposure and focus information.
- ***Dufaycolor printing/developing filters are in manuscript box in lower storage - Riggall Processed Bay***
- Processing Status
- Processed
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