Turner is noted for his attempts to develop what is believed to be the first actually implemented colour motion picture system, initially with financial backing from
Frederick Marshall Lee, then later from
Charles Urban. On 22 March 1899, while Turner was employed in the London workshop of colour photography pioneer
Frederic E. Ives, Turner and Lee applied for a British patent on a 3-colour
additive motion picture process. It was granted on 3 March 1900. In September 1902, Urban bought out Lee's interest and continued funding research and development. Turner's camera used a rotating disk of three colour
filters to photograph colour separations on one roll of
black-and-white film. A red, green or blue-filtered image was recorded on each successive
frame of film. The finished film print was projected, three frames at a time, through the corresponding colour filters. The system suffered from two types of colour registration problems. • First, because the three frames had not been photographed at the same time, rapidly moving objects in the scene did not match up on the screen and appeared as a blurred jumble of false colours. • Second, and apparently much worse, mechanical instabilities in the system caused serious overall registration problems, so that the three superimposed images ceaselessly jittered and wove about relative to each other. When Turner died in 1903, Urban passed on the development of the process to
George Albert Smith in the hope of creating a commercially viable process. Smith however found the process unworkable, and instead developed
Kinemacolor, a greatly simplified two-colour version that enjoyed great commercial success until 1915. ==Legacy==