posted February 28, 2019 01:35 PM
Hi all, I think this might be the first new topic from me although I´ve been around for a while and especially followed the Wolverine scanner thread with interest. I had the Somikon HD-XL version of that scanner in my beginning of my scanning activities but since I saved up for a RetroScan Universal 2k from Moviestuff I sold the Somikon. I have had my ELMO GS-1200 stereo projector since 35 years but I had never tested the optical sound function on it since I had never had any film with that sound format. A while ago I saw on eBay this Super 8 print of "The Woman In Red", full length (87 min) with OPTICAL sound and a quite good price on it so I decided to go for it. I was very interested to see if my projector would get any sound from this film and it did! I was surprised that the audio was quite good even though there are some pops due to the sometimes rather scratchy print, especially in the beginning of the movie. I thought I would share with you how it looks, the print as it is and after about 30 sec with some post processing in Sony Vegas Pro 13 and Film9 software. The sound was ripped with my Elmo GS-1200 and I also have the Moviestuff RetroSync sound module which makes a lip-sync audiofile with 24 fps. This clip is 82 sec. Please tell me what you think!
posted February 28, 2019 02:11 PM
Really excellent Job Kurt, the processed scan looks flawless! But Woman In Red is a poor title for this film, as everybody is red, at least in the original scan!
-------------------- The best of all worlds- 8mm, super 8mm, 9.5mm, and HD Digital Projection, Elmo GS1200 f1.0 2-blade Eumig S938 Stereo f1.0 Ektar Panasonic PT-AE4000U digital pj
Posts: 3468
From: Sunnyvale, CA USA
Registered: Sep 2011
posted February 28, 2019 11:02 PM
Your scans Kurt show you have to pay the price for quality. MovieStuff equipment has never been cheap...but they perform. Although my MovieStuff Workprinter XP and Workprinter 16 are old generation scanners...they still run well and the results are very high quality.
Thanks for showing us the excellent quality these new scanners are capable of producing
Posts: 525
From: Dallas, TX, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
posted March 02, 2019 02:44 PM
That's pretty lousy registration for a scanner in that price range. Just watch that sprocket hole bounce all over the place. The sprocket hole should be absolutely stationary.
I would recommend you careful about the amount of "sharpening" you add. I think you added too much because it looks like it's been sharpened. If you notched back off of that a bit the resulting image would be much better in my opinion (except for the bouncing).
Posts: 5468
From: Nouméa, New Caledonia
Registered: Jun 2003
posted March 02, 2019 11:50 PM
The original prints is just red... nothing left. After color correctiln process some colors come up. This is a mustery for me... where those colors are from?
My understanding is the color corrction can be done for pale color prints hence make it stronger. But that red and white is equivalent to black and white print... how the later scan can have color? Unless this is a colorized process but this is not, right?
posted March 03, 2019 10:28 AM
Thank you all for your comments on the clip. As for "the lousy registration" I would say that the Universal does a fairly good job with this sometimes very lousy print. See picture of area round the sprocket hole which has a lot of noise and sometimes looks like it has even DOUBLE sprockets. The sprocket hole sensor on the Universal is a pass-through UV LED sensor which looks for the edge of the sprocket and this can be fine tuned with a sensor adjustment. I know that Movistuff has now come up with a new type of gate which uses reflection instead of pass-through sensing which should handle different types of films even better. Here is an example of how this print sometimes looks around the sprockets.
Posts: 3468
From: Sunnyvale, CA USA
Registered: Sep 2011
posted March 03, 2019 10:48 AM
Kurt, in viewing your sample scan I thought the registration was quite good comparing it to my older MovieStuff equipment. I use AviSynth stabilization scripts in post which smooths out any shifting. Not a big deal.
-------------------- Janice
"I'm having a very good day!" Richard Dreyfuss - Let It Ride (1989).
Posts: 280
From: Rajburana, Bangkok, Thailand
Registered: Aug 2017
posted March 03, 2019 07:19 PM
Ugh,semi-transparent film edge with probably water damage on the edge (hence that "sprocket imprint") - perfect receipt for optical sprocket sensor. No wonder why it's that jumpy.
-------------------- Just a lone collector from a faraway land...
posted March 05, 2019 11:21 AM
I love that screenshot you have there from you're scan Kurt ...
Though faded, that shot there just goes to show as to just how sharp super 8 optical sound really was! Even if the screenshot might have been sharpened a tad in the process, you can only make a screenshot oh so sharp if the "source material" was already pretty danged good!
Now, I want to get out my own print and screen it!!!
-------------------- "All these moments will be lost in time, just like ... tears, in the rain. "