February 1937 Fisher Body Plant Number One, Flint Michigan, United Auto Workers sit-down strike inside factory, 400 workers occupying assembly line with red UAW banners hanging from rafters, men in blue work shirts and brown leather aprons sleeping on car seats pulled from production line, makeshift kitchen serving hot meals from large aluminum pots, wives and supporters outside factory gates wearing colorful winter coats and knitted scarves passing food through windows, 1936 Chevrolet Master DeLuxe automobiles in various stages of assembly painted in period colors including maroon, dark green, and black, factory interior lit by overhead industrial lighting creating warm yellow illumination, Margaret Bourke-White industrial documentary style with enhanced color saturation, 50mm standard lens capturing both intimate worker solidarity and industrial scale of occupation, medium shot at worker eye-level showing determination and organization during historic labor action, bright winter sunlight streaming through large factory windows contrasting with warm artificial lighting inside plant, mood of working-class solidarity and organized resistance against corporate power, rich color palette emphasizing workers' clothing blues and browns, factory machinery's grays and blacks, food containers' metallic shine, and support banners' bright reds, composition using assembly line's diagonal perspective and hanging banners to organize visual space, background showing Flint cityscape through windows and company security forces maintaining distance, authentic 1930s labor movement atmosphere of industrial democracy and collective bargaining breakthrough, period accurate factory equipment and production materials, workers maintaining discipline and organization during occupation.