But maybe home colour wasn't much of a thing in '62.
Here in the UK home colour printing had started growing by the early 1960s. Dr Kurt (Curt) Jacobson (of Developing fame) had introduced his Pakolor process around 1952, initially film, paper, & chemistry, amateur kits were available from around 1955. The process, was later bought by the Pavelle Corporation of New York, and marketed as a 3 bath amateur process here in the UK as Paterson Pavelle from December 1962. The Paterson kit included both paper and chemistry, and filters, I made my first colour prints with a kit around 1969. There hade been improvements over the years.
British Synthacol Ltd of Stockport, also sold a colour printing kit in 1953/4 but unlike Pakolor/Pavell it was not around long. There were others, like Raycolor a year or so later with a Universal process, and many photographers mixed their own chemistry from formulae publish in the BJP for all leading brands of film & paper. Jack Coote's book "Colour Prints" revised 1963 edition indicates Agfacolor, Ektacolor & Kodacolor,, and Pakolor, could all be printed by home users, so processing kits and paper were available. Somewhere, I have a mid 60's Kodak pamphlet on home colour printing.
Again, here in the UK, Rayco and Melico were making colour analysers by the mid 1960s, suitable for amateurs and professional use.
Jacobson's company in Church Road, Epsom, also made a range of commercial colour processing equipment on a nearby industrial estate, and this became Durst UK in the 1970s. Ron Mowrey (PE) stated that Kodak held Kurt Jacobson in very high regard, as a leader in his field.
Ian