Site icon FilmColors – An Interdisciplinary Approach

Exploring the New Design

After several months of complex web development, the new design of the Timeline of Historical Film Colors went online last week. While the look may not seem very different at first glance, the architecture of the web resource has changed considerably with the aim of organizing the immense and growing amount of information in a better and more accessible way.

This posting introduces the new features to guide you through the new architecture and to help you explore all the hidden secrets.

The slides in the header lead to the contributions provided by individual archives.

Gasparcolor detail page with different sections: Click in + to open.

The new lightbox allows you to zoom into the photographs.

Two different prints of La Cucaracha (USA 1934, Lloyd Corrigan) displayed with the compare function. Which one is more authentic?

A tagging system (left) gives detailed access to photos, galleries, quotes and/or entries respectively.

Keywords organized in the tagging system’s thesaurus allow concise searching for all the elements contained in the database.

With the tagging system you can now search assisted by a current set of approximately 500 keywords that have been added to the thesaurus. Are you interested in animation? Do you like Alfred Hitchcock’s films? Would you like to investigate splices? Or are you fascinated with ships? In addition to search via tags there are general and detailed search tools also included in the upper part of the search page.

At present, all the 180 galleries are tagged with basic information. Around 200 quotes have been processed and labeled, but only a fraction of the more than 5,000 photographs have been tagged individually.

In ongoing work over the course of the next year, we will connect all the elements to the tagging system. In the next few months a group of student assistants will work on data management.

So please check back on a regular basis and follow this blog.

Please enjoy your navigation through the wealth of information and beauty on the Timeline of Historical Film Colors!

Acknowledgement

The new design has been funded by a grant from the Swiss National Science Foundation in the framework of the research project Film Colors. Technologies, Cultures, Institutions.

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