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* [https://www.colorlines.com/articles/icymi-vox-explored-color-film-and-what-it-does-dark-skin Racial bias in the history of color film] | * [https://www.colorlines.com/articles/icymi-vox-explored-color-film-and-what-it-does-dark-skin Racial bias in the history of color film] | ||
* [https://www.canopycanopycanopy.com/contents/color-goes-electric/#title-page/ ''Color Goes Electric''] | * [https://www.canopycanopycanopy.com/contents/color-goes-electric/#title-page/ ''Color Goes Electric''] | ||
[[Category:Film prints]] |
Revision as of 17:17, 10 December 2016
Leader ladies (also called china girls) are the photographs of (most often) women that sometimes appear in film countdown leader on prints of all gauges. Their images were used by film lab workers setting color timing or black and white density. Often appearing on exhibition prints but rarely seen on screen by an audience, images of leader ladies have long been collected by archivists, projectionists and film lab employees. The below links provide some history on leader ladies as well as various image galleries.
External Links
- Wikipedia: China Girl (film term)
- China Girls on the Margin of Film by Genevieve Yue
- Gallery of leader ladies
- China Girls-Leader Ladies Facebook page
- Leader Ladies Instagram Gallery
- Moving Image Archive gallery
- Short film from the Harvard Film Archive featuring various leader ladies
- Atlantic article on the history of models used in color television calibration.
- Racial bias in the history of color film
- Color Goes Electric