Ektachrome film has three separate light-sensitive layers; each layer is sensitive to a different group of wavelengths corresponding to red, green, and blue colors. When the film is exposed, each layer records a latent image based on its sensitivity. A yellow filter prevents blue light from exposing the green- and red-sensitive layers, which have some sensitivity to blue light. The E-4 process is faster than E-3; whereas E-3 required 15 steps and up to 70 minutes from start to finish, E-4 was completed in approximately 50 minutes over 13 steps. about 10 °F (6 °C) higher than E-3. The temperature tolerance is ±1 °F for prehardener, ±°F for the first developer, and ±2–5 °F for all other steps. The ME-4 process was a motion picture variation of the E-4 process. The major change for E-4 was the inclusion of a chemical reversal agent, which permits processing of the film without the manual re-exposure/fogging step required by the predecessor E-1 / E-2 /
E-3 processes. Total darkness is required during the first four development steps; normal room light can be used for the remaining steps. ==History==