I'm gonna be using Ektachrome 64T in the daytime with an Elmo 600 S camera.
After doing a bit of research I've found the Elmo camera won't be able to read the exact exposure, and that I should over expose by 2/3 stop and use a 85B lens filter.
Posts: 7016
From: Long Island, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
posted September 11, 2008 03:26 PM
Hey Ian!,
A lot of people are doing this and getting very satisfactory results. There's a school of thought that slight overexposure actually reduces the graininess.
I messed around with 64T in a Bolex 280, putting a half stop exposure compensation in and out on the same roll exposed at 40ASA under the same conditions and the difference was not very dramatic. I can't honestly say one setting looked better than the other.
For your own peace of mind you should try a test roll before you shoot something important. Last Spring I basically winged it: shooting 4 rolls of our family vacation at Disney World on the hope they'd come out well. They did, but the moment before I saw that first roll projected was a little....tense!
-This is our Christmas film this year.
-------------------- All I ask is a wide screen and a projector to light her by...
Posts: 7016
From: Long Island, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
posted September 11, 2008 04:57 PM
I think I shoot Super-8 simply for the joy of it. When people ask why I "don't shoot video" I tell them I do that too, it just isn't as much fun!
64T is grainier than K40, and a lot of us are used to judging grain by that standard. If supressing the grain keeps it from being too much then I'm all for it. Projecting as large as most of us do it's easier to get to that point...
My exposures were through the camera's internal daylight filter and looked fine. Someday I want to try it with the film-correct filter and see what happens.
I actually live about 50 miles from NYC, but show up there now and then!
-------------------- All I ask is a wide screen and a projector to light her by...
posted September 11, 2008 10:03 PM
Spectra here in Hollywood does Fuji Velvia 50D -- actually, it's notched for 40ASA, which worked fine for me -- and this film is very much sharper than Kodak's 64T. The color on 64T is very true-to-life, while Velvia is a little more to the exaggerated end of saturation, reminiscent of Kodachrome (though different). It may cost a little more to track down over there, but a projected image won't look better than this unless you use Kodachrome.
Posts: 330
From: Hampton Hill, Middlesex, U.K.
Registered: Feb 2004
posted September 12, 2008 04:55 AM
Of course don't forget that the original Kodachrome 40 is alive and I have recently shot fresh stocks bought from Wittners in Germany. No problems as with the 64T sticky cartridges, high grain, wrong exposure and magnetic sound stripe not sticking.
Posts: 7016
From: Long Island, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
posted September 12, 2008 09:48 AM
I want to try, Velvia but at the time I was getting ready for vacation I read on the small gauge film forum that they were having trouble with jitter.
I guess they've fixed the problem now.
-------------------- All I ask is a wide screen and a projector to light her by...
Mark - good tip! What is 40T stock like from Wittners?? I.e. results of the image? Comparable to Kodachrome 40??
Also I had a look at their website and couldn't work out where to send the film to get processed - as my German isn't too hot! Where do you send it?? Thanks!!
posted September 12, 2008 12:16 PM
Speaking of Wittner, they reportedly do Velvia too. And isn't Cinevia another name for the same thing?
Winbert, Spectra only sells the Velvia as a process-paid product, which means you'd either have to ship it back here, lose the money, or negotiate. It's a standard E-6 process, so it's not hard to have done.
Posts: 7016
From: Long Island, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
posted September 12, 2008 05:09 PM
It used to be there were two Kodachrome labs in the world, but Kodak closed the Swiss lab at the same time they discontinued K-40.
So unless there is a lab on some other planet, Dwayne's is it for the entire universe.
It could be worse: they are actually pretty good and generally nice to deal with.
-------------------- All I ask is a wide screen and a projector to light her by...