Sonochrome - Medieval Puntz 🆕 Tested & Working

: Engineers included specific blue-violet light transmission levels to ensure the "talking pictures" sensors could read the soundtrack.

: Artists used small metal tools (punches) to create "stippled" backgrounds on gold leaf, making halos or borders shimmer in candlelight. Sonochrome - Medieval Puntz

Developed to solve technical issues in early cinema, Sonochrome film was engineered to allow sound-on-film recording without the tinting interfering with the photoelectric cells. : Film historians use spectral analysis to digitize

: Film historians use spectral analysis to digitize Sonochrome prints accurately. Sonochrome - Medieval Puntz

: Dyes were impregnated directly into the base (pre-tinted) rather than applied in a dye bath.

: Modern researchers use Non-Invasive Analysis like X-ray fluorescence (XRF) and infrared spectroscopy to identify the pigments and tools used in these intricate patterns.

While "Sonochrome" and "Medieval Puntz" represent two different eras of visual technology, they share a common theme in the study of and material analysis . 🎞️ Sonochrome: The Sound of Color