Integral tripack analysis/Technicolor print type: 3 colour analysis on tripack film/ print by subtractive dye transfer.
Technicolor was widely used as a print system until the 1970s and in China until the 1990’s. Even after the advent of Eastman Colour, the three Technicolor plants (Los Angeles, London and Rome) continued to produce positive copies, some produced from 35mm Kodachrome, and later three matrices were made from Eastman Colour negatives.
Although Technicolor has probably been the only print system to use integral tripack film as the starting point, any of the previous printing systems, from duplitized-toned film to Gasparcolor, could do the same.
Technicolor was a primarily a cheap production method for printing, but the copies of the later films confuse archivists with credits that say "Print by Technicolor" and also "Made in Eastman Colour" and finally it is better to inspect the film and establish from it's material exactly how it was made.
Almost all manufacturers of colour film code marks can be found on the edges of Technicolor film copies: Kodak, Ferrari, Agfa, Gevaert, DuPont, etc. These indications refer to the manufacturers of the black and white film or blank film that was used for the production of the Technicolor prints and not to the colour system.