Author
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Topic: Cleaning lines on film?
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Osi Osgood
Film God
Posts: 10204
From: Mountian Home, ID.
Registered: Jul 2005
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posted July 31, 2007 09:03 PM
I have a very nice print of "Flying Tigers' (suprisingly sharp!), but it does have a number of lines, and of course, lines attract dust over time.
Now, while we can never get rid of the lines, we can "clean" the lines. I did this sucessfully once before on a print as an experiment, but I've forgotten what soap and what concentration of soap to water i used.
Hows about some help out there? I know it can be delicate, as if you have too much soap in the water, it can lift off the magnetic track, so I would appreciate any good help, as I know that this print can look much better.
Thanks ahead of time
OSI
-------------------- "All these moments will be lost in time, just like ... tears, in the rain. "
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Brad Miller
Administrator
Posts: 525
From: Dallas, TX, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
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posted August 07, 2007 10:55 PM
Kevin, I still have the original films that were treated with FilmGuard 20 years ago. I would get two identical new copies of trailers and clean one with FilmGuard and leave the other one totally untouched. Today, the FilmGuarded prints still run like new, but the ones left untouched are extremely brittle, have poor registration and are generally warped or buckled in some manner. Even archives use it on their prints as well as nitrate! You would think that might be a bad idea, but it isn't as it makes the film run much smoother and that means less of a chance of something jamming and a fire initiated. There are also archives that use FilmGuard in reprinting old footage, sometimes being scanned one frame at a time. So to answer your archival question, yes I think it is pretty safe. It is also not haz mat, so it can be shipped via air freight.
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