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Topic: what to do with red prints?
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Larry Arpin
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 953
From: Sunland, CA, USA
Registered: Dec 2006
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posted January 30, 2013 12:48 AM
Although most of my collection is low-fade or Technicolor I do have some faded titles I still enjoy watching. Titles I have faded are Airport(actually brownish & scope), 2 Minute Warning(scope), Jaws 2(scope),stop motion trailer reel,Safety Second(Tom & Jerry),Millionaire Droopy(scope),Guns for San Sebastian, last reel(15 minutes) of 3 Worlds of Gulliver, and more I can't remember. I would never think of tossing them in the trash.
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Joe Caruso
Film God
Posts: 4105
From: USA
Registered: Jun 2003
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posted January 30, 2013 07:29 AM
The late John Black had the similar idea, to filter a tinted cyan gel (much like the hi-hat lighting procedure), so the colors might regain some of their original vibrancy. Might suggest one step further, combine red, blue and green (Tosco Lighting has several gels with a variance in color), there is a primary mix which, if filtered properly might restore a gone-red print - My feeling is NEVER to junk ANY prints, even those that are dark - In the course of tech, we might come up with the way to bring back what was faded - Color was not lost only faded - Now, stupid as it is, can certain shorts for example be re-photographed on color-stock? - As a tag, most of the CASTLE travelogue series still maintain original colors, with a sieve, cleaning and storage properly - Beleive me, it works for the most part - Bottom line; Please don't discard old prints, someday you'll know why and appreciate the fact that you did - Shorty
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Osi Osgood
Film God
Posts: 10204
From: Mountian Home, ID.
Registered: Jul 2005
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posted January 30, 2013 12:32 PM
I agree on the cyan filter, it can do wonders with a fading print, (but not too faded as then, it basically looks like a sepia tone print).
It ticks me off, i had a lovely glass wheel that was absolutely awesome, it had the whole color spectrum all round it, not overly brilloina t colors, and I used an old bunsen burner as the thing it was connected to and I'd put it in front of the lense and then just turned the wheel about until I came to the perfect adjustment for the optimum color. Basically, it was like the knob on old TV's that allowed you to adjust the tint of the TV image, and it worked brilliantly ...
and for the life of me, I can't find the danged thing! (GRRRR!)
-------------------- "All these moments will be lost in time, just like ... tears, in the rain. "
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Timothy Ramzyk
Expert Film Handler
Posts: 220
From: Milwaukee,WI,USA
Registered: Nov 2006
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posted January 30, 2013 01:30 PM
I have a confession. I hate red color, it's my enemy. I worked in a commercial photo-lab for years, and do digital restoration/retouching on the side. Most of my color prints were purchased in the 80's and virtually none were LLP. The second my first color prints showed signs of beginning to warm, I sold them all faded or not. I just couldn't handle the idea of sitting and watching my color catalog slip away from me.
Red doesn't just represent a shift in color it's the loss of other colors, and the loss of the range of contrast and details that the other colors comprised. When yellow and blue are gone only the ghost of red content in those details remain.
I agree with most here that say that film has a quality that video doesn't match, but only when it's color is sound, it's the ratio of which the film was originally projected, and it's not a multi-generational dupe. If not, then in IMO you're better off projecting a DVD or better yet Blu-ray of the film in question.
I will now put on my raincoat to duck the rotten fruit and vegetables.
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Hugh Thompson Scott
Film God
Posts: 3063
From: Gt. Clifton,Cumbria,England
Registered: Jan 2012
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posted January 30, 2013 05:31 PM
I have bought in a red print of a favourite film, and corrected the colour with gels, sometimes unwittingly, but if its a film I want, thankfully not too many, I will put up with it until replaced.I have three features on 16mm of "JASON & THE ARGONAUTS", one that couldn't be any redder, one that is passable and the other a stunning colour print.Has anyone noticed that the red prints are usually the prints without a mark on them.
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