This film footage, entitled 'Kino - Girl of Colour', was shot by William Friese-Greene in 1920 in Biocolour. This was a two-colour additive process, in which colour-sensitive black and white film was shot and projected through alternating red-orange and blue-green filters. While the result gave an illusion of colour, it suffered from red and green fringing. This digital reproduction is not an accurate representation of the original, as it accentuates the red and green.

The film shows a girl sitting at a table eating and moving fruit about. It ends with a man sitting at a table opening a cigarette case and a girl sat in a chair sorting through an assortment of flags. The man may be Friese-Greene himself.
Acknowledgement: ©Bristol Museums, Galleries and Archives