![]() ![]() The sepia was not restored to the film until 1989. #The wizard of oz black and white moviemovie theatres in 1949, ten years after it was made, the Kansas scenes were printed on the film that way, not in sepia. This is because, when the film was re-released to U.S. Before the film received its 50th anniversary restoration, the Kansas scenes were always shown on TV in regular black-and-white. As the camera comes closer to the doorway we lose sight of the stand-in then Dorothy appears in a full-color costume. ![]() The dramatic change to color as Dorothy goes through the doorway was accomplished by having a stand-in, dressed in a sepia-toned costume, open the sepia-toned door. In sepia tone, a brownish layer is placed over a black-and-white photo or film scene in order to give it a certain quality. The Kansas scenes are sepia-toned, not pure black-and-white. ![]()
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