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Topic: What do you call the sprocket lever?
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Barbara Strohl
Film Handler
Posts: 44
From: Hamilton, NJ, USA
Registered: Jan 2016
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posted May 25, 2017 12:37 PM
Ahh that is the problem. Maybe it is because I am not coming from a movie film background but I have found standard transfer a starting point not the end.
I do clean and make some repairs to the films but I will not cut out even one frame. I don't even cut out burnt frames until I see if it can be salvaged digitally (and only the digital ever gets cut). I will go to lengths that seem insane but I am not willing to loose anything more than what was lost before coming to me.
My unprocessed scans show every flaw, bad splice, etc. It is easy enough to do digital editing. As I get better and gear gets better, I can always give the film another try because I still have it.
A german gentleman developed software to scan a strip of film with a flatbed scanner, isolate each frame, and then stitch the frames back together. Using moving capture or single frame capture is easier and most choose that route. However with strip scanning and gear I already owned and skills I already had, I got excellent results, even from abused film. My problem has been automating it for damaged film. I am scanning about 6" at a time and can do this manually or automatically for decent condition film.
I just feel like I'm trying to reinvent something that I don't completely understand.
---- Since I mentioned it, I would like thank Mr Kurz who created CineToVid and helped me a lot when I decided it was my best bet for brittle and damaged film.
-------------------- Barb
I'm an amateur noob. Please be gentle.
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