thumb|Agfa-Farbenplatte of Bad Kreuznach, Germany, 1933. thumb|An Agfacolor slide of a café in Oslo, Norway, 1937. thumb|An Agfacolor slide of Paris, France, 1937. thumb|An Agfacolor slide of Stockholm, Sweden, 1938. thumb|An Agfacolor slide, Hungary, 1938. thumb|An Agfacolor slide, Zakopane, Poland, 1938. thumb|An Agfacolor slide, Sweden, 1938. thumb|An Agfacolor slide of New York City, 1938. thumb|An Agfacolor slide, Warsaw, Poland, 1939. thumb|Budapest, Hungary, 1939. thumb|An Agfacolor slide from Germany, early 1940s. While the colors themselves have held up well, visible damage includes d
thumb|Agfa-Farbenplatte of Bad Kreuznach, Germany, 1933. thumb|An Agfacolor slide of a café in Oslo, Norway, 1937. thumb|An Agfacolor slide of Paris, France, 1937. thumb|An Agfacolor slide of Stockholm, Sweden, 1938. thumb|An Agfacolor slide, Hungary, 1938. thumb|An Agfacolor slide, Zakopane, Poland, 1938. thumb|An Agfacolor slide, Sweden, 1938. thumb|An Agfacolor slide of New York City, 1938. thumb|An Agfacolor slide, Warsaw, Poland, 1939. thumb|Budapest, Hungary, 1939. thumb|An Agfacolor slide from Germany, early 1940s. While the colors themselves have held up well, visible damage includes dust and Newton's rings. thumb|Swedish battleship HSwMS Gustaf V|HM Pansarskepp Gustaf V (An Agfacolor slide dated until 1957).
Agfacolor was a series of color film products made by Agfa of Germany. The first Agfacolor, introduced in 1932, was a film-based version of their Agfa-Farbenplatte (Agfa color plate), a "screen plate" product similar to the French Autochrome. In late 1936, Agfa introduced Agfacolor Neu (New Agfacolor), a pioneering color film of the general type still in use today. The new Agfacolor was originally a reversal film used for making "slides", home movies and short documentaries. By 1939, it had also been adapted into a negative film and a print film for use by the German motion picture industry. After World War II, the Agfacolor brand was applied to several varieties of color negative film for still photography, in which the negatives were used to make color prints on paper. The reversal film was then marketed as Agfachrome. These films use Color Developing Agent 1 in their color developer.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).