| 1. | The colours are then applied later during production of the positive print.
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| 2. | The use of modern colour film for the positive print is another drawback.
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| 3. | Negative prints allow, in principle, unlimited duplicates of the positive print to be made.
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| 4. | However, because daguerreotypes only produce a direct positive print, no duplicates can be made.
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| 5. | John Wayne had one positive print that had never been through a projector gate.
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| 6. | In 1923, M�li�s discarded his collection of negative and positive prints for his films.
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| 7. | However, a 16mm reduction positive print may exist.
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| 8. | This information is transferred from the negative ( visible once developed ) to the positive prints.
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| 9. | The result is a positive print of the combined background and foreground ( fig . 8 ).
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| 10. | The positive print is paired with a negative print of the same image, which enhances the striking composition.
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